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Myanmar Survivors Face Disease as Relief Awaits Entry (Update5)

by "Zomi" <zomi@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > May 7, 2008 at 10:16 PM

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Zomis says:

The paranoid SPDC does not trust their own people. They do not trust 
themselves. They are suffering from inferiority complex.  They  are afraid

of unarmed relief workers.

The SPDC still prevents many relief teams from coming to Burma.

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Myanmar Survivors Face Disease as Relief Awaits Entry (Update5)

By Demian McLean
Enlarge Image/Details

May 7 (Bloomberg) -- Survivors of the Myanmar cyclone, now estimated to
have 
killed as many as 100,000, are at risk of cholera and other infectious 
diseases as the United Nations urges the military government to accept 
foreign help.

More than 1 million people may have been left homeless since Tropical 
Cyclone Nargis hit the country formerly known as Burma on May 3. Teams
from 
aid group Doctors Without Borders found 80 percent of houses damaged and 
meter-high (3-foot) flood waters in some areas of Daala and Twante 
townships, where 300,000 people lived, in the Irrawaddy River delta area.

``Even in the best of times, it takes two days to reach the delta,'' said 
John Sparrow, Kuala Lumpur-based spokesman for the International
Federation 
of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies. ``You can imagine what it's like 
when bridges are out, roads are out and half the countryside is under 
water.''

The United Nations called on Myanmar's military rulers to allow 
international aid workers to begin relief operations as the prospect of a 
humanitarian disaster looms. Aid officials said the number of dead will
rise 
without quick distribution of drinking water, food and medicine.

``Under these circumstances, infectious diseases such as cholera can
spread 
easily,'' Doctors Without Borders said in a statement.

Rising Fatalities

The death toll may reach 100,000 as more bodies are found in the delta
area, 
Shari Villarosa, the U.S. charge d'affaires at the embassy in Yangon, said

in a conference call today. Myanmar's state television reported that
22,000 
people have died and more than 40,000 are missing.

The UN's World Food Program said four flights containing a total of 45 
metric tons of high-energy biscuits are on their way to Yangon, the
largest 
city. They are scheduled to arrive early tomorrow morning.

The U.S., which has offered at least $3.25 million, assistance, is still 
trying to persuade ``the very paranoid regime'' to allow deliveries of 
humanitarian, Villarosa said.

``We have assets already in Thailand that can help, if Burma accepts our 
offer,'' said Major Carrie Hurd, spokeswoman for the U.S. Navy's 
Honolulu-based Pacific Command.

U.S. assets include C-130 cargo planes, helicopters and the USS Essex,
which 
has surgical rooms and 600 hospital beds. Some of the Marines in the
region 
helped with relief after the 2004 tsunami, Hurd said.

U.S. Offers Help

The offer for aid came this week in a White House statement that also 
criticized the military junta and praised Burma's jailed opposition
leader, 
Aung San Suu Kyi, a Nobel Peace Prize winner.

In the meantime, the U.S. may use its aircraft and boats to ferry relief 
supplies closer to Myanmar so other countries can then deliver them, Hurd 
said.

France tried today to raise the subject of Myanmar's obstructionism in the

UN Security Council. Russia, China and South Africa fought France's
proposal 
to be briefed by the UN's emergency relief coordinator, and the move
failed.

``We are ready to send men, food, drugs, everything which is needed to 
help,'' said Jean-Maurice Ripert, France's ambassador to the UN. ``We are 
ready to do that but are prevented from doing that.''

The UN's World Food Program is distributing 800 metric tons of food stocks

it holds in Yangon, the former capital, spokesman Chris Kaye said in an 
e-mail from Thailand.

Shipment Approved

Myanmar today gave permission for the Red Cross to send a plane load of 
supplies from Kuala Lumpur tomorrow, Sparrow said. The flight will deliver

300 shelter kits containing tarpaulins, mosquito nets, water and cooking 
utensils, he said.

The Red Cross has 20,000 more kits in its Kuala Lumpur warehouse, the 
Geneva-based organization said in a statement.

Other countries offering aid include the U.K., Australia, Canada, New 
Zealand, Finland, Norway, China and European Union countries.

Myanmar's military rulers are ``suspicious of outsiders and very sensitive

to foreign influences,'' Maureen Aung-Thwin, director of the Burma
Project, 
said in an interview with Bloomberg Television today.

``They admitted to 22,000'' people killed, she said. ``I believe the
figure 
is higher than that. Somebody said 150,000, and I don't think that's 
untrue.''

Port Blocked

The Red Cross also hoped to send supplies via ship containers. However,
the 
port at Yangon ``is blocked or even closed'' because of sunken ships and 
other damage, according to Richard Horsey, spokesman for the UN disaster 
response unit.

The impoverished country of 47.8 million people has been under
international 
sanctions since the military rejected the results of elections in 1990. 
Transparency International last year ranked Myanmar as the most corrupt 
nation in the world along with Somalia.

Myanmar, ruled by the military since 1962, is scheduled to hold a
referendum 
May 10 for a new constitution before elections in 2010. The government
said 
the vote will go ahead, except in the worst-affected areas where it will
be 
delayed until May 24.

The U.S. State Department says the referendum is an attempt by the
military 
to retain power.

To contact the reporters on this story: Demian McLean in Washington at 
dmclean8@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Updated: May 7, 2008 17:11 EDT



http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601080&sid=afflTTUrzaNs&refer=asia

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 1 Posts in Topic:
Myanmar Survivors Face Disease as Relief Awaits Entry (Update5)
"Zomi" <zomi  2008-05-07 22:16:24 

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tan13V112 Sat May 17 7:05:50 CDT 2008.