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Burmese after the Cyclone Nargis storm

by SchussUK @ 2008-05-05 - 23:50:23

One day you've got everything and the next absolutely nothing, but there's hoipe since we're going to help out!

DEADLIEST RECENT STORMS

Hurricane Katrina, US, 2005 - at least 1,836 dead
Orissa Cyclone, 1999, Northern India - at least 10,000 dead
Hurricane Mitch, 1998, Central America - at least 11,000 dead
Typhoon Thelma, 1991, Philippines - 6,000 dead
Bangladesh cyclone, 1991 - about 138,000 dead
Bhola cyclone, 1970 - at least 300,000 dead

Animated guide: Hurricanes

Burmese storm toll 'tops 10,000'

More than 10,000 people were killed in a devastating cyclone that hit western Burma on Saturday, Foreign Minister Nyan Win has said on state TV.

He said his government was ready to accept international assistance. Aid shipments are now being prepared.

Thousands of survivors of Cyclone Nargis are lacking shelter, drinking water, power and communications, but in many regions help has not yet arrived.

Five regions in which 24 million people live have been declared disaster zones.

[More:]

Expressing his sadness at the scale of the disaster, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon confirmed that UN officials were meeting Burmese government representatives to discuss how to help.

If the toll is confirmed, Nargis is now the world's deadliest storm since a 1999 cyclone in India killed 10,000 people.

Nargis hit the south-east Asian country on Saturday with wind speeds reaching 190km/h (120mph). It brought with it a sea surge that smashed through towns and villages.

Earlier on Monday, the death toll was being put at 351 but the foreign minister later went on TV to announce the figure of at least 10,000.

With information still coming in, he warned the toll could yet rise.

The towns of Bogalay and Laputta, in the region of Irrawaddy, are among those locations particularly badly hit, state media have reported.

None of the casualty figures have been independently confirmed.

The BBC is not permitted to report from Burma, also known as Myanmar.

Houses 'skeletal'

Thousands of buildings have been flattened, power lines downed, trees uprooted, roads blocked and water supplies disrupted.

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Aerial footage of the cyclone aftermath

A Rangoon resident who spoke to relatives in Laputta told BBC Burmese that 75% to 80% of the town had been destroyed.

Houses along the coast had been reduced to skeletal structures, 16 villages had been virtually wiped out and no help had reached Laputta, he said.

Pictures on state TV show security services working to clear roads but in Rangoon and elsewhere there are complaints that the response to the disaster has been weak.

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An eyewitness describes the cyclone

"Where are the soldiers and police? They were very quick and aggressive when there were protests in the streets last year," a retired government worker complained to Reuters news agency.

He was referring to protests led by Buddhist monks last year that were quickly put down.

Earlier, a BBC journalist monitoring the situation in Burma from Bangkok, Soe Win, said the shortages of power and water were particularly critical.

Local people were saying that if the situation continued for another two or three days, it would be really difficult for them, he reported.

Aid assessment

Several hundred thousand people are in need of shelter and clean drinking water, UN disaster response official Richard Horsey said.

But damage to roads and communications mean it is impossible to tell the true extent of the situation, he added.

Prices of food, fuel and basic necessities have also risen dramatically.

The UN and international aid agencies are sending assessment teams to the worst-hit areas and shipments are being prepared.

Thailand has announced it is flying in a transport plane loaded with nine tonnes of food and medicines and India is sending two naval ships carrying food, tents, blankets, clothing and medicines.

The US, which released an immediate funding package of $250,000 (£127,000) to be channelled through the UN, said that Burmese authorities had refused permission for an American disaster assistance response team to enter.

Meanwhile, Burma's military junta has said a referendum on a new national constitution will go ahead on Saturday. People were "eagerly looking forward to voting", it said.

But some people are now wondering if this natural disaster could have serious political repercussions, reports the BBC's Andrew Harding in the Thai capital Bangkok.

Are you in Burma, or do you have friends and family there? Have you - or they - been affected by the cyclone? Send your comments and pictures using the post form below:

Send your pictures to yourpics@bbc.co.uk , text them to +44 7725 100 100 or you have a large file you can upload here .
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At no time should you endanger yourself or others, take any unnecessary risks or infringe any laws.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/asia-pacific/7384041.stm

Published: 2008/05/05 19:14:58 GMT


 
 

Comments: Hide subcomments

CoCoZee [Visitor]

06/05/08 @ 02:20

Disaster tests Burma's junta

By Kate McGeown
Asia-Pacific editor, BBC News website

The country had been sliding ever deeper into poverty, and after the anti-government protests in September were brutally quashed, the prospect of an end to military rule seemed ever more remote.

Even the junta's planned referendum on its long-awaited constitution, scheduled to take place on 10 May, did not sound promising - with accusations of vote-rigging and intimidation marring the government's claim that it would be a step towards democracy.

[news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/7384552.stm]

Ma-BellyMa-Belly [Member]
06/05/08 @ 12:28

The people from Burma have suffered enough, why punish them more by not sending aid because of their government is a double as any other country --- it's inhumane. We all have to work something out with their government so everyone gets a chance to help them out immediately, I'm working on it as well with my government as we aren't a rich government it won't be that much but we'll do our best and everyone should do so!...

~ D

Ma-BellyMa-Belly [Member]
06/05/08 @ 12:23

Has anyone ever heard the dumbest rhetoric from Mrs Laura Bush on Burma? She said: "People weren't notified of the storm" - or something close to this??? Did she forget KATRINA and all the death in her own country because their were not enough buses to take them out while hundred of school buses were stuck in garages? It was actually too funny to listen to her...

Delphine

QuasuoQuasuo [Member]
06/05/08 @ 13:46

A disaster strikes the west precipitate with helping hands.

Before the cyclone disaster where were the warnings from the Burmese military? Where now is the Burmese army now? I know they too busy to help because they are full of activity maltreating imprisoned monks and suppressing their own population!!!

Aid groups are struggling against an indifferent military regime to get visas. What sort of unsympathetic morons are running Burma anyways? Their so-called 'military intelligence' could be more suitable than pertain into the Burmese military beating up and suppressing their own people… now the West has to clean up after them?

Quasuo

StatschewStatschew [Member]
http://statschew.blog.ca/
06/05/08 @ 15:56

No help whatsoever should be going forth to a Junta ruled hell-hole. Let India and China their arms sponsors of that disgusting government be giving aid. They defend that country so much, let them help and crack up their banks for their current clients! Let the traders open their bank accounts and give! Looks like those two trade slumlords out of North Korea and Burma won't be giving anything but American condemnation. How charitable and keen!!

SC

OlympiaOlympia [Member]
07/05/08 @ 00:35

Yeah!! Anyone noticed? The 2 men here are pretty bad with humanitarian aid here... what on earth is going on? Thanks God the world has got enough women to make some goodeness around... shame on you!!

Oly

Debb-caDebb-ca [Member]
08/05/08 @ 13:26

I'm shocked by the 2-men as well... anyone ever noticed, the public always gets the blame for the stupid people that runs the government!!

Debb-Ca

YUbinYUbin [Member]
07/05/08 @ 20:05

This is a sad situation that could happen anywhere... so helping out is a must...

The 30 tonnes of aid delivered yesterday is a small amount, barely enough for 2,000 people to be fed for several weeks, he said.

Myanmar's military junta prefers to receive bilateral aid from donor countries, which allows the regime to control its distribution and that's not a good thing, isntead of help their own they want to play politics about all....

Thailand and India have already sent shipments of relief supplies to Myanmar, but the UN warned that those shipments are unco-ordinated.

'YU'

HÅKONHÅKON [Member]
08/05/08 @ 01:20

Assemble a new community for the people not destroy them!

Come on, this is the best time to smooth down the Junta and the Burmese military with our generosity and giving support to the cyclone victims that affected their soul there. We won't bicker on who and how much to donate. In my state community centers are gathering offerings from public aid in a variety ways - pouring in from even insignificant shop owners. It is sad we are into speculation to help or not over politics and power. Overlook the squabbles. Burma needs all our help today and right now.

HÅKON

Burma access [Visitor]

08/05/08 @ 19:28

UN 'disappointed' at Burma access

The UN says it is extremely disappointed at the slow progress made in securing access to victims of last weekend's cyclone in Burma. Humanitarian chief John Holmes told reporters that Burma's response was "nothing like as much as is needed".

In addition to about 23,000 people who died in the storm and tidal surge, 1.5 million are at risk, he said. The US has been denied permission to fly aid into Burma - and one official said they were considering air drops.

Some supplies have been allowed into Burma but many more tonnes of aid, and dozens of foreign staff, HAVE NOT.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/asia-pacific/7391008.stm

Published: 2008/05/08 18:10:58 GMT

LuVhermitLuVhermit [Member]
08/05/08 @ 19:34

When the West will learn how to stop the thread of such corrupt regimes...

Several aid fund has been initiated but all these things the Junta will profit from it first before it gets to the people. As it happened in Zimbabwe the UN and any form of news reporting is so manipulated to be practically useless in the mist of the confusion.

LH

After CYCLONE [Visitor]

09/05/08 @ 03:57

CYCLONE AFTERMATH

Burmese blog the cyclone

After the devastation of Cyclone Nargis, communication with people inside Burma has been sporadic and extremely difficult.
But Burmese blogs and news sites have been quick to react by posting vivid eyewitness accounts of the disaster and mobilising fundraising efforts.

COMMUNICATIONS DESTROYED

First-hand accounts of the devastation wreaked by Cyclone Nargis and its aftermath have been trickling out of Burma.

also posts a comprehensive list of donation sites.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/asia-pacific/7387313.stm

Published: 2008/05/08 11:54:49 GMT

Aid Crew Lands [Visitor]

10/05/08 @ 13:20

First Israeli aid crew lands in Myanmar

Small Israeli rescue team manages to enter cyclone-stricken country despite government ban, reports to Ynet of dreadful destruction. 'The residents are waiting for help,' says Josh Krieger of Latet organization

A first Israeli aid crew arrived in Myanmar on Saturday morning in order to assist the victims hit by the Nargis cyclone.

Talking to Ynet, Josh Krieger of the Latet organization reported of the difficult sights and the great damage caused by the storm, as well as of the difficulties posed by the authorities.

Tal Rabinovsky
Published: 05.10.08, 13:52 / Israel Activism

www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3541463,00.html

DeelischDeelisch [Member]
11/05/08 @ 19:55

The UN estimates that only a quarter of survivors have received any aid so far. The World Food Programme distributed 38 tonnes of previously held-up aid, but warned much more had to get through. And in a major setback for the aid effort, a Red Cross boat carrying aid sank in the Irrawaddy Delta.

State TV said the death toll had increased to 28,458, while 33,416 were still missing after the cyclone. Aid agencies, however, estimate that 100,000 have died and warn that this figure could rise to 1.5 million without provision of clean water and sanitation....

DaridanDaridan [Member]
14/05/08 @ 07:31

My thoughts go out to victims and their families. I think other big countries in the neighbourhood - India and Japan will help out their neighbour in distress.

Daridan

SchussUKSchussUK [Member]
17/05/08 @ 23:10

Burma 'guilty of inhuman action'

UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown has condemned Burma's military government for not allowing international aid to reach the victims of Cyclone Nargis.

Mr Brown told the BBC that a natural disaster had been turned into a "man-made catastrophe" because of the negligence of the ruling generals. He said their actions since the cyclone, said to have killed at least 78,000, amounted to inhuman treatment.

France has said Burma is on the verge of committing a crime against humanity. Burma has refused to allow in French and US aid ships which are waiting off the coast.

In addition to the dead, some 56,000 people are officially reported missing. Burma took foreign diplomats on a tour of the worst-hit region, the Irrawaddy Delta, on Saturday but the visit was dismissed by a senior US envoy as a "show".

The international community is trying to organise a team of Asian and United Nations aid workers in the hope this will be more acceptable to Burma's rulers, a UK Foreign Office minister has said.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/uk_news/politics/7406023.stm

Published: 2008/05/17 19:27:00 GMT

Burmese need help [Visitor]

18/05/08 @ 14:49

The UN should go in and take care of the Burmese people and push those penny ante dictators off the screen. Burma is an ancient, honorable nation, it deserves better than tinpot dictators.

At is the point what are United Nations there for if they prolong the agony of the Burmese people -- please help them NOW!!!

i-Dorrui-Dorru [Member]
19/05/08 @ 03:15

Very sad for both country China and Burma.... my cousin (the fashion designer) and I have already engaged ourselves to get our annual fashion show auction onto two more shows instead of one, so we could give more money for the women's shelter and the red cross... it's needed, one of the show will be on next month ....

So - what is everyone else doing to raise funds?

Dedorru

LuVhermitLuVhermit [Member]
20/05/08 @ 17:21

If Myanmar would have been a strategically importance to the US, they would have already intervene to step down the junta. The entire world stands astounded watching innocent people suffering like this, just because some army decided so. It’s probably the only one time in recent history that the world should use guns to force the junta to a runaway, and yet, nothing happens.

LH

KurnmeetKurnmeet [Member]
24/05/08 @ 15:25

The CYCLONE NARGIS in Burma or Myanmar or whatever they want to call it - is as much as devastating as China's earthquake, and the only reason the Burmese Government doesn't want outside people helping them is because they have been brainwashing their people as the government have been saying that anything coming from the outside of their country is bad and corrupt, going in there to help everyone would contradict everything the government have been saying for years... so these tyrannizing morons finally gave to 'okay' to let some help in....

Kurn

OlympiaOlympia [Member]
28/05/08 @ 01:59

Suu Kyi's house arrest extended

Burma's ruling junta has renewed pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi's house arrest.

Police earlier detained about 20 activists as they marched to the Nobel Peace Prize laureate's home in Rangoon, where she has been held since May 2003.

UN chief Ban Ki-moon said he regretted the extension of the detention, while US President George W Bush said he was "deeply troubled" by the decision.

Ms Suu Kyi's party won 1990 elections, but she was denied power by the junta. The 62-year-old National League for Democracy (NLD) leader has spent more than 12 of the last 18 years in detention.

Police bundled a number of opposition activists into a truck as they marched on Tuesday from the NLD party headquarters to her lakeside villa in Rangoon. Correspondents had expected her house arrest - which has been renewed annually - to be rolled over for another year.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/asia-pacific/7420960.stm

Published: 2008/05/27 20:00:23 GMT

OlympiaOlympia [Member]
28/05/08 @ 02:01

This post here above is just to remind everyone why the rest of the world doesn't really care for this JUNTA and their unlawful ACTIONS!!

Oly

SchussUKSchussUK [Member]
29/05/08 @ 18:54

Witnesses say many villages have received no outside help!!!

Myanmar has been promised millions of dollars in aid from the United States, other governments and aid organizations. But the junta has refused to allow the U.S. military to help distribute aid to affected areas, appearing to fear that a large-scale international relief effort would loosen the grip the generals have held since a 1962 coup.

:??:

Amelie

SchussUKSchussUK [Member]
29/05/08 @ 18:52

Burmese are scared to death about American helpers...

U.S. warships will soon leave waters near Myanmar if the junta does not allow the American military to deliver food, water and other aid to cyclone survivors...

Myanmar appears no closer to lifting restrictions on an international relief effort nearly four weeks after the storm left 134,000 people dead or missing and 2.4 million destitute, according to Adm. Timothy Keating, commander of U.S. forces in the Pacific. He said the refusal by the military government of the former Burma to accept relief supplies aboard U.S. naval ships, including the USS Essex, could lead him to order the ships to leave the area.

:??:

Amelie

BranwynBranwyn [Member]
29/05/08 @ 21:36

Kyemon newspaper said in a Burmese-language editorial:

"The people from Irrawaddy can survive on self-reliance without chocolate bars donated by foreign countries,"

Myanmar's junta lashed out at offers of foreign aid on Thursday, criticizing donors' demands for access to the Irrawaddy delta and saying Cyclone Nargis' 2.4 million victims could "stand by themselves".

As with all media in the former Burma, it is tightly controlled by the army and is believed to reflect the thinking of the top generals, who until now have shown signs of growing, albeit grudging, acceptance of outside cyclone assistance.

SchussUKSchussUK [Member]
31/05/08 @ 17:25

More updates:

Burma policy costs lives, says US

US Defence Secretary Robert Gates has accused Burma of causing the loss of tens of thousands of lives by hindering international cyclone relief efforts. Mr Gates said the United States had had ships and aircraft ready to help after Cyclone Nargis hit a month ago.

Unlike Indonesia and Bangladesh after major natural disasters, Burma had denied entry to the country, he said. An estimated 2.4m people remain homeless and hungry following the cyclone, which struck on 2 May.

The Burmese-language daily, Myanma Ahlin, said cyclone survivors could get by without "bars of chocolate" from the international community.

At least 78,000 people have died as a result of the cyclone, and another 56,000 people are still missing.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/asia-pacific/7428916.stm

Published: 2008/05/31 04:31:44 GMT

SchussUKSchussUK [Member]
08/06/08 @ 21:31

Burma's state-run media has strongly condemned foreign media reports of the devastation caused by Cyclone Nargis.

An article in the state daily, The New Light of Myanmar, accuses self-seekers of Faking video footage of the destruction and selling it to foreign media who have used it to harm Burma's image.

It says reports that survivors are living in dire conditions in the Irrawaddy Delta are exaggerated.

Some of the most shocking footage that has emerged from the storm-hit region has come from video shot by Burmese amateurs and circulated on DVDs.

Those who have seen it say the images are difficult to watch, with corpses rotting in fields and families huddled under makeshift shelters in the daily monsoon rains.

Amelie

SchussUKSchussUK [Member]
16/06/08 @ 18:43

Too little too late for Burma

By Jane Elliott
Health reporter, BBC News

Too little is being done to help the people of Burma and their health is suffering, an aid expert has warned.

Kaz de Jong, head of mental health services for Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF), said that five weeks after the cyclone there are still remote villages in the Irrawaddy Delta that have received no help.

Other areas, he says, have received just a small amount of aid.

A veteran dealing with natural disasters, Dr de Jong has coordinated services for the Pakistan earthquake and the Asian tsunami, but he says this is the worst response he has ever seen.

More help needed

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/health/7450259.stm

Published: 2008/06/16 09:19:19 GMT

SchussUKSchussUK [Member]
22/06/08 @ 16:42

Burmese saved by survival instincts

SEVEN weeks have passed since Cyclone Nargis swept through the Irrawaddy Delta in southern Burma, leaving a trail of flattened villages and broken lives and arousing international sympathy that turned to anguish as the military government obstructed foreign aid.

While it is estimated that the cyclone may have killed 130,000 people, the number of lives lost subsequently is much lower than at first feared, in part because of the resilience of villagers used to coping with a brutal junta.

Reports from Burma, obtained despite heavy media restrictions which don't allow this journalist to give their name, find relief workers continuing to criticise the government's secretive posture.

They say the main problems include an obsession with security, restrictions on foreign aid experts, and weeks of dawdling that has left bloated bodies befouling waterways and survivors marooned with little food.

But the specific character of the cyclone, the hardiness of villagers and aid efforts by private citizens have helped prevent further death and sickness, according to aid workers

More...

news.scotsman.com/Burmese-saved-by-survival-instincts

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