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Myanmar backtracks on U.S. aid flight, U.S. says

by "Zomi" <zomi@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > May 8, 2008 at 12:47 PM

=====

Zomi says:

The SPDC politicised the cyclone disaster.

Aid has barely trickled into one of the world's most impoverished
countries, 
although experts feared it would be too little and too late to cope with
the 
aftermath of Nargis, which also left one million homeless.

=====

WRAPUP 7-Myanmar backtracks on U.S. aid flight, U.S. says

Thu May 8, 2008 8:41pm IST



* U.S. still awaiting approval for aid flights

* Little evidence of relief effort in delta

* U.N. emergency supply flights begin arriving in Yangon

* Junta uncontactable due to fallen communication towers

* Baby born to mother who lost 7 children in cyclone (Updates with details

of aid effort)

By Aung Hla Tun

YANGON, May 8 (Reuters) - Desperate survivors cried out for aid on
Thursday 
nearly a week after 100,000 people were feared killed by Cyclone Nargis,
as 
pressure piled up on Myanmar to throw its doors open to an international 
relief operation.

The United States was awaiting approval from the ruling junta to start 
military aid flights, but the U.N. food agency and Red Cross/Red Crescent 
said they have finally started flying in emergency relief supplies after 
foot-dragging by the generals.

U.S. ambassador Eric John told a news conference in Bangkok the United 
States and Thailand had thought the Myanmar generals had agreed to let a
U.S 
military cargo plane fly in supplies.

But that turned out to be premature.

"We don't have permission yet for the C-130 to go in, but I emphasise
'yet'" 
John said.

Approval for such a flight would be significant, given the huge distrust
and 
acrimony between the former Burma's generals and Wa****ngton, which has 
imposed tough sanctions to try to end 46 years of unbroken military rule.

Aid has barely trickled into one of the world's most impoverished
countries, 
although experts feared it would be too little and too late to cope with
the 
aftermath of Nargis, which also left one million homeless.

Witnesses have seen little evidence of a relief effort under way in the 
hard-hit Irrawaddy delta region.

"We'll starve to death if nothing is sent to us," said Zaw Win, a 
32-year-old fisherman who waded through floating corpses to find a boat
for 
the two-hour journey to Bogalay, a town where the government said 10,000 
people were killed.

AID PLANES ARRIVE

The storm pulverised the delta on Saturday with 190 km (120 mph) winds 
followed by a massive 12 ft wave that caused most of the casualties and 
damage, virtually destroying some villages. It was the worst cyclone in
Asia 
since 1991, when 143,000 people were killed in neighbouring Bangladesh.

State television on Thursday night did not give an update of the death
toll, 
which stood at 22,980 with 42,119 missing as of Tuesday. Diplomats and 
disaster experts said the real figure is likely to be much higher.

"The information that we're receiving indicates that there may well be
over 
100,000 deaths in the delta area," said Shari Villarosa, charge d'affaires

of the U.S. embassy in Myanmar.

U.N. officials who had earlier complained the generals were putting up 
obstacles to an emergency airlift, said a half-dozen cargo planes had been

allowed to land at Yangon air****t.

The Red Cross/Red Crescent confirmed its first aid plane took off from
Kuala 
Lumpur, carrying six tonnes of shelter materials.

World Food spokesman Paul Risley said aid agencies normally expect to fly
in 
experts and supplies within 48 hours of a disaster, but nearly a week
after 
this cyclone, few have been able to send reinforcements into Myanmar.

A country that has long been suspicious of the outside world is wrestling 
with a decision over whether to allow what would be the biggest 
international presence in the country in decades to help care for a
sizeable 
****tion of its population.

Some opponents accuse the junta of stalling because they don't want an 
influx of foreigners into the countryside during Saturday's referendum on
an 
army-drafted constitution that looks set to cement the military's grip on 
power.

Medicins sans Frontieres, which has 1,238 people in Myanmar, said it was 
ferrying aid into the delta via trucks and boats.

"We are focusing on those still alive; 50 percent of them have wounds and 
they are infected," MSF official Frank Smithius in Myanmar told Australian

radio. "Because of the winds and high water, people got smashed around."

Jean-Michel Grand, executive director of Action contra la Faim in London, 
said the logistical obstacles were formidable. "The roads are very poor or

destroyed, and in many cases there were no roads before. Everybody's
looking 
at boats as an alternative. It's going to be a massive logistics
challenge.

British medical aid agency Merlin is converting a luxury cruise ****p into
a 
floating hospital to reach survivors.

Thai Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej failed to reach Myanmar's generals on

Thursday after U.S. President George W. Bush asked him to intervene with 
them to expedite the international aid effort.

"We couldn't reach them because the communication towers have been
damaged," 
government spokesman Wichianchot Sukchotrat said.

Amidst all the death and destruction, life asserted itself. Than Win, who 
lost seven of her 10 children to Nargis gave birth on Wednesday to a boy, 
she named "First Love".

"After what happened, this is a beautiful present," she said, lying on a 
wooden table in one of the few houses left standing in Bogalay town, where

an estimated 10,000 died. (Additional re****ting by Nop**** Wong-Anan,
Grant 
McCool and Darren Schuettler in Bangkok, Jalil Hamid in Kuala Lumpur; 
Writing by Bill Tarrant; Editing by Darren Schuettler)

http://in.reuters.com/article/domesticNews/idINSP4879820080508

=====
 




 10 Posts in Topic:
Myanmar backtracks on U.S. aid flight, U.S. says
"Zomi" <zomi  2008-05-08 12:47:54 
Re: Myanmar backtracks on U.S. aid flight, U.S. says
CharlesLiu <chliu528@[  2008-05-08 17:07:38 
Re: Myanmar backtracks on U.S. aid flight, U.S. says
Jim Walsh <jimNOwalsSP  2008-05-09 14:46:32 
Re: Myanmar backtracks on U.S. aid flight, U.S. says
Sando <shweminthame@[E  2008-05-09 01:31:26 
Re: Myanmar backtracks on U.S. aid flight, U.S. says
"labor" <lab  2008-05-09 22:31:20 
Re: Myanmar backtracks on U.S. aid flight, U.S. says
CharlesLiu <chliu528@[  2008-05-09 01:45:23 
Re: Myanmar backtracks on U.S. aid flight, U.S. says
Jim Walsh <jimNOwalsSP  2008-05-12 15:29:20 
Re: Myanmar backtracks on U.S. aid flight, U.S. says
demorising@[EMAIL PROTECT  2008-05-09 06:50:13 
Re: Myanmar backtracks on U.S. aid flight, U.S. says
rst0wxyz <rst0wxyz@[EM  2008-05-09 08:20:46 
Re: Myanmar backtracks on U.S. aid flight, U.S. says
bmoore@[EMAIL PROTECTED]   2008-05-09 12:54:25 

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tan12V112 Tue Dec 2 2:17:21 CST 2008.