Published: 6:07AM Thursday May 15, 2008
Source: Reuters
The United Nations has said up to 2.5 million people might have
been affected by the Myanmar cyclone and proposed a high-level
donors conference as the Myanmar junta again limited foreign
aid.
The European Union's top aid official said the military
government's restrictions on foreign aid workers and equipment were
increasing the risk of starvation and disease.
UN humanitarian affairs chief John Holmes told reporters between
1.6 and 2.5 million people were "severely affected" by Cyclone
Nargis and urgently needed aid, up from a previous estimate of at
least 1.5 million.
Thai Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej met Myanmar Prime Minister
Thein Sein in Yangon and urged him to ease visa rules for relief
workers. He said he was told Myanmar could "tackle the problem by
themselves."
Myanmar state television raised its official toll to 38,491 dead,
1,403 injured and 27,838 missing.
The International Federation of the Red Cross estimated on the
basis of reports from 22 organisations working in Myanmar that
between 68,833 and 127,990 people had died.
In New York, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, who has repeatedly
expressed frustration over the slow response of Myanmar's reclusive
leaders, proposed holding a "high-level pledging conference" to
deal with the crisis.
Ban spoke to reporters after meeting with representatives of
Myanmar and countries from Asia, Europe and America.
Britain's UN ambassador, John Sawers, however, indicated that the
high-level conference would be more than a donors' meeting, calling
it a "major international meeting" in line with Prime Minister
Gordon Brown's calls for a UN summit on coordinating aid efforts in
Myanmar.
Ban also proposed appointing a joint coordinator from the UN and
the Association of Southeast Asian Nations to oversee aid delivery
and said he would soon send Holmes to Myanmar.
Myanmar's UN ambassador, Kyaw Tint Swe, said he was pleased that
participants had agreed the crisis should not be politicised but
must remain a humanitarian issue.
However, Ban, Sawers and US Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad all said
failure to properly handle the crisis would inevitably politicise
it.
"The way it will get politicised is if ... assistance is not
allowed to arrive in a timely manner to save lives, and no time
should be lost," Khalilzad said. "The Myanmar government has a
responsibility to ensure lives are saved, not lost."
Trickle of aid
Nearly two weeks after the deadly cyclone swept through the heavily
populated Irrawaddy delta, foreign aid was still a trickle.
Myanmar, formerly called Burma, was once the world's biggest rice
exporting country, but more than 40 years of military rule have
left it impoverished. The military junta has repeatedly crushed
pro-democracy movements and tightly restricts visits by
foreigners.
Samak told reporters in Bangkok that Myanmar's leaders had insisted
that teams of foreign experts, who have been refused entry, were
not needed.
"They are confident of dealing with the problem by themselves.
There are no outbreaks of diseases, no starvation, no famine. They
don't need experts, but are willing to get aid supplies from every
country," Samak said.
Louis Michel, the top European Union aid official, disagreed.
"There is a risk of water pollution. There is a risk of starvation
because the storages of rice have been destroyed," he told
reporters in Bangkok.
"We want to convince the authorities of our good faith. We are
there for humanitarian reasons," he said. He dismissed suggestions
from some European countries that they should bring in aid without
awaiting permission from the authorities.
Adm. Timothy Keating, the commander of US forces in the Pacific,
also rejected that idea.
He said US emergency aid flights would continue for the time being,
despite Myanmar refusing permission for US officials to monitor, or
help with, distribution.
A senior US military official in Washington said there were signs
aid was stacking up at Yangon airport and said Washington wants to
fly choppers to the areas hit worst.
The official said there were reports that some 230 camps had been
set up to house more than 230,000 displaced people. "They're
springing up all over the place," he said. "The problem they have
is a lack of water and sanitary facilities."
Officials said despite reports that some supplies were being stolen
or diverted by the army, the humanitarian needs were so great that
they would keep making deliveries - while continuing to urge that
US aid workers be granted visas.
World Food Programme chief Josette Sheeran said in Washington her
organisation had so far reached 28,000 people.
"A critical issue now is access," she said. "Our flights are
allowed to bring in some supplies, but far from enough - a massive
effort is needed to save lives..." she told a US Senate
hearing.
Holmes also warned that epidemics of diseases like cholera, malaria
and measles "can break out at any time now."
One group of Christian doctors has been treating children in
churches, operating below the government's radar. "We have to try
to do something," said one of the doctors, giving children diarrhea
medicine in a church north of Yangon.
More heavy rain and winds were forecast in the delta as a tropical
depression moved in, but the UN weather agency discounted fears a
new cyclone was forming.
In a gesture to critics, Myanmar's rulers invited 160 personnel
from Bangladesh, China, India and Thailand to assist in the relief,
but experts said that was a fraction of the number needed.
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