Bangkok/Yangon - Myanmar's death toll from Cyclone Nargis
could increase 15-fold to 1.5 million in coming weeks unless a
tsunami-style relief effort is put in place and access granted to
international aid workers, aid agency Oxfam said Sunday.
'With the likelihood of 100,000 or more killed in the cyclone
there are all the factors for a public health catastrophe which could
multiply that death toll by up to 15 times in the coming period,'
said Oxfam's Regional Director for East Asia, Sarah Ireland.
'We support a call to lift visa restrictions on international aid
agencies wanting to assist disaster affected people in Myanmar,' said
Ireland, joining a growing chorus of relief experts demanding
Myanmar's ruling generals grant them visas to expedite a massive
emergency aid programme in the areas hard-hit by the cyclone on May 2
to 3, which are only receiving a trickle of supplies a week after the
storm.
Myanmar's military regime has delayed visa requests for dozens of
aid agencies who have been trying to get their experts in to the
country since the cyclone struck last week.
To its credit, the junta over the weekend eased up on restrictions
on the aid itself, after causing an international furore Friday by
seizing a delivery of high-energy biscuits flown in by the World Food
Programme (WFP) for the cyclone victims.
Yangon International Airport authorities on Friday refused to pass
over a cargo of biscuits to UN officers working in Myanmar,
reportedly because the military wished to distribute the aid itself.
After threatening to halt all flights over the food seizure, the
WFP decided to go ahead with deliveries anyway this weekend.
On Saturday, Myanmar airport authorities allowed biscuits flown in
on a flight from Phnom Penh to be handed over to WFP in Yangon.
'It was a very positive sign,' said WFP spokesman Marcus Prior.
'The airport authorities could not have been more cooperative.'
But he acknowledged that WFP experts awaiting visas to enter the
country have not yet received them.
Cyclone Nargis hit at a sensitive time politically for the junta,
which had planned a referendum on Saturday to win approval of a new
constitution that will cement its dominant role under future elected
governments through s system of appointees in the upper and lower
houses.
Ignoring international appeals to postpone the vote and
concentrate on the helping the cyclone victims instead, the military
went ahead with the referendum on Saturday, although it was delayed
until May 24 in 47 of the worst-hit townships.
Cyclone Nargis is deemed the worst natural disaster to hit
South-east Asia since the December 26, 2004, tsunami that killed
almost 250,000 people in eight countries rimming the Indian Ocean.
That disaster, coming the day after Christmas, prompted an
unprecendented outpouring of aid from the international community
that was welcomed and generally facilitated by the affected nations.
Cyclone Nargis has been aq different story.
'In the Boxing Day tsunami 250,000 people lost their lives in the
first few hours but we did not see an outbreak of disease because the
host governments and the world mobilised a massive aid effort to
prevent it happening,' said Oxfam's Ireland. 'We have to do the same
for the people of Myanmar.'
Citing evidence from previous experiences in disasters such as the
2004 Indian Ocean tsunami and Pakistan earthquake in 2005, Oxfam said
that without an immediate injection of life-saving aid such as clean
water sources, up to 1.5 million people are at risk from a diseases
such as cholera, typhoid and shigella.
'We are certain the international humanitarian community can make
a difference on the ground and that's why we want to work with the
people of Myanmar affected by this terrible disaster,' said Ireland.
Although Myanmar is still stalling on granting visas to
international aid workers, it was permitting the flow of goods into
the country.
The World Food Programme flew in three deliveries of high-energy
biscuits and emergency kits over the weekend and the UN Human Rights
Commissioner was allowed to send trucks with 20 tons of provisions
from Thailand into Myanmar via the Mae Sot border crossing.
Thai King Bhumibol Adulyadej, 80, added to the aid flow on Sunday
when he donated 2,000 relief kits valued at over 1 million baht
(31,750 dollars) to victims of the cyclone.
The royal donation, including kitchen utensils and bedding
material, was transported by a Thai military C-130 aircraft to Yangon
Sunday morning.
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