[DIPECHO Network] Myanmar Cyclone Updates_Myanmar faces fresh cyclone threat

List Moderator [ICIMOD-DIPECHO Network] list-moderator at disasterpreparedness.icimod.org
Wed May 14 05:49:40 CDT 2008


Dear all,

Please find the news item below which states that the another major storm
could be heading for the devastated Irrawaddy delta region, according to UN.
It could become a significant tropical cyclone within the next 24 hours.


Kind regards,
List moderator


Myanmar faces fresh cyclone threat

Source:
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/7328BCE4-268C-4514-BF16-B49A3662E35B.
htm
OR
http://tinyurl.com/67cwlq

Eleven days after Cyclone Nargis left tens of thousands dead in Myanmar, the
United Nations has warned that another major storm could be heading for the
devastated Irrawaddy delta region.
	
The UN weather centre is tracking the tropical storm off the coast of
Thailand, and has said it could become "a significant tropical cyclone
within the next 24 hours".

The warning comes after a major aid group told Al Jazeera that hundreds of
thousands of survivors from Cyclone Nargis are facing a potentially
"apocalyptic" threat from water-borne diseases.

Tim Costello, the CEO of Australian charity World Vision, told Al Jazeera
there were already signs that diseases such as dysentery, diarrhoea, dengue
fever were starting to take hold.

Speaking from Yangon, he said the group's relief workers in the hard-hit
Irrawaddy delta were "gravely worried that we are tottering on the edge of
this epidemic breaking out."

"If it does, its lethal effects will be apocalyptic," he said.

On Tuesday the United Nations' emergency relief arm warned Myanmar will
"face a catastrophe of monumental proportions" unless aid efforts match the
scale deployed during the Asian Tsunami.

Aid groups say the first 10 days are critical in getting relief to survivors
of any disaster, but almost two weeks on that window has now closed for
people in Myanmar.

With the death toll from Nargis already topping 34,000, there are reports of
soldiers blocking foreign aid workers from reaching some of the worst-hit
areas.

The military has taken control of foreign aid supplies, and there are
suspicions that relief supplies are being misappropriated after victims
reported they are receiving poor quality food.

The bulk of the aid supplies that have been cleared to land in Myanmar are
reported to be stuck on planes at Yangon airport, which does not have the
lifting equipment needed to unload it.

As a result the few aid agencies allowed to operate in Myanmar say they have
only reached a third of the one million people left homeless by the cyclone.

On Wednesday Thailand's prime minister left for Myanmar to reportedly
pressure the military government to allow international aid workers in by
urgently issuing their visas.

Samak Sundaravej declined to comment to waiting reporters except to say that
he had plans to meet his Myanmar counterpart, Thein Sein, in Yangon.

The trip comes after last week's failed attempt by the Thai PM, who was
responding to requests from the US, Britain and the UN, to act as mediator
with Myanmar's leaders.

Samak's delegation was also carrying medical supplies and satellite phones
to donate to relief efforts, according to Thai officials.

'Race to save lives'

Speaking to Al Jazeera World Vision's Tim Costello said it time to put aside
political considerations and focus urgently on the humanitarian need.

"This is not a time for politics. It's a time to race to save lives."

He said in any humanitarian crisis it was important to make sure that aid is
channelled directly to international aid agencies and not to the government.

"[But] the truth is that both the Australian and US governments could only
negotiate their flights in on the basis that [aid] went to the military," he
said.

"My staff are in tears of frustration, even guilt … that they haven't got
aid to people who are waiting for it.

He said aid workers have to keep pushing through despite the "really, really
narrow parameters in which we operate".

Costello said despite the overall gloomy scenario, there were indications
that the UN may be able to get visas for 20 experts to coordinate emergency
water and sanitation supplies and help prevent of epidemics breaking out.

On Tuesday the UN aired its "increasing frustration" at being barred from
helping the neediest survivors, saying the crisis in Myanmar's remote,
flooded south posed an "enormous logistic challenge".

Elisabeth Byrs, a spokeswoman for the UN's emergency relief arm, in warning
of a "second catastrophe", said it needed "at least an air or sea corridor
to channel aid in large quantities as quickly as possible".

But the military government of Myanmar has said that the needs of the people
after the storm "have been fulfilled to an extent".

Vice-Admiral Soe Thein, a government spokesman, told the New Light of
Myanmar newspaper: "The nation does not need skilled relief workers yet."

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