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Cyclone disaster worsens in Burma
By our correspondent
12 May 2008
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The cyclone disaster in Burma is continuing to worsen. The
official death toll announced yesterday stands at 28,458 dead
and 33,416 missing, but unofficial estimates put the figure much
higher. Up to 2 million people have been left homeless and struggling
to survive without access to food, clean water, shelter and medicine.
The UN Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs has
issued a new assessment that between 1.2 million and 1.9 million
people need urgent assistance. Given the gravity of the
situation including the lack of food and water, some partners
have reported fears for security, and violent behaviour in the
most severely affected areas, it stated. The UN body estimated
that the number of deaths could range from 63,290 to 101,682
and 220,000 people are reported to be missing.
The low-lying Irrawaddy delta, which was battered by Cyclone
Nargis on May 3, is crisscrossed by waterways and rivers. Roads
and communications into the area have been damaged or completely
cut. Access to many places is limited to boat or helicopter. A
Red Cross cargo ship carrying supplies for more than 1,000 survivors
sank on Sunday after hitting a submerged tree trunk. The crew
members were able to climb to safety.
Limited aid supplies are reaching some areas. The International
Red Cross estimated on Friday that through their combined efforts,
relief agencies and the Burmese government had distributed aid
to 220,000 people. Many more, however, are desperately in need
of supplies. According to Plan International, some 150,000 are
living in 117 temporary camps in Labutta, a town that was devastated
by the cyclone. Another 56,000 are in refugee camps in or near
three other major towns, including Bogalay.
Oxfam regional director Sarah Ireland warned of a massive catastrophe
if the Burmese junta did not open its doors to international aid.
She said it was critical to get clean water and sanitation to
survivors in the next few days. [I]ts a perfect storm
if you will of factors such as lack of water, sanitation, predicted
heavy rain over the next week, lack of food as well as an outbreak
of disease such as cholera that could all combine to endanger
[the] lives of up to 1.5 million, Ireland explained.
Poonam Khetrapal Singh, deputy director of the World Heath
Organisations Southeast Asia office, told the Associated
Press, that the priorities were safe water, sanitation and
safe food. Andrew Kirkwood, head of Save the Children in
Rangoon, said: Theres a big risk of diseasedysentery,
malaria and severe malnutrition. The whole area is under salt
water and drinking water cannot be purified by using tablets.
Many people are getting sick. According to one estimate,
20 percent of children in the devastated areas are suffering from
diarrhea.
International aid has begun to reach Burma. The International
Red Cross stated last Friday that three planes carrying some 14
tonnes of shelter material had arrived in Burma and were cleared
without delay. Aid is getting through in increased amounts,
the aid organisation stated. Another seven flights with another
20 tonnes of shelter material, jerry cans and 2,000 mosquito nets
were to arrive by today.
A UN flight from Italy carrying 30 tonnes of water purification
equipment and other supplies was due to land in Rangoon yesterday.
The UNHRC said that two truckloads of tents and plastic sheeting
had been sent into Burma from northern Thailand on Saturday. The
Burmese junta has authorised a US military flight to ferry cargo
to the country and it is due to arrive today. A World Food Program
(WRP) shipment of 38 tonnes of dry biscuits, which was impounded
at the Rangoon airport, has been released and WFP aid has resumed.
Burmese authorities are, however, continuing to delay the issuing
of visas to international personnel and have rejected the involvement
of the US military in aid operations inside the country. Intense
pressure is being imposed on the junta by the Bush administration
and its European allies, backed by the international media and
the UN, to open its doors to aid officials and to foreign militaries.
The junta has demonstrated its callous indifference and anti-democratic
methods on many previous occasions. Its aid is undoubtedly limited
and its control over aid operations is motivated above all by
its determination to cling onto power. That does not, however,
explain what can only be described as a propaganda campaign to
vilify the Burmese generals and demand that they bow to international
demands to open up their borders.
Like the Asian countries hit by the 2004 Asian tsunami, Burma
is an economically backward country which lacks much basic infrastructure.
Prior to the cyclone, the majority of the population lived on
less than $US1 a day. According to the World Health Organisation,
Burma had the worlds worst health system in 2000, apart
from war-ravaged Sierra Leone. These difficulties have been compounded
by economic sanctions imposed by the US and European countries
against the regime.
The sanctions, like the current barrage of propaganda over
international aid, are aimed at politically undermining the junta,
not at assisting the Burmese people. The US administrations
hostility to the junta is primarily because of its close ties
with Beijing, which Washington regards as a rising economic and
strategic rival. The toppling of the regime and installation of
a government sympathetic to the US is part of broader plans to
forge closer relations with countries that lie on Chinas
borders.
The White House has offered only $3.5 million to date in financial
aid and is demanding the direct involvement of US and other international
officials in directing operations. The Burmese junta is insisting
that aid be either financial or goods, and that it is capable
of running relief operations. At this point, one cannot tell from
the highly-coloured media coverage of the catastrophe to what
extent the military is even engaged in aid work.
The political agenda behind the condemnations of the junta
became apparent last week when French Foreign Minister Bernard
Kouchner suggested the convening of the UN Security Council to
invoke its responsibility to protect powers to intervene
in Burma, with or without the regimes permission. Kouchner
referred to the fact that French and British warships were already
in the region and could be used. The US Navy also sent four vessels,
including a destroyer, to nearby waters.
While US Defence Secretary Robert Gates last week ruled out
such action, several comments and editorials over the weekend
pushed the idea of what is tantamount to a military invasion of
Burma. One of the most direct was published in Time magazine
under the headline Is it time to invade Burma? After
denouncing the Burmese regime, its inability to relieve widespread
suffering and refusal allow in aid workers, the article declared:
Thats why its time to consider a more serious
option: invading Burma.
The article noted that USAID director Andrew Natsios had floated
the idea of the US military making aid drops over Burma regardless
of the juntas attitude. It raised the suggestion of retired
General William Nash who called on the US to press China to use
its influence with Burma and also suggested working with the Indonesian
military to ferry in supplies. China, India, Indonesia and Thailand
all maintain relations with Burma and their aid has been accepted.
Despite calls from US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, neither
Beijing nor New Delhi has joined the international denunciations
of Burma.
The Time article concluded: And if that fails?
Its important for the rulers to know the world has
other options, [UN official Jan] Egeland says. If
there were, say, the threat of a cholera epidemic that could claim
hundreds of thousands of lives and the government was capable
of preventing it, then maybe yesyou would intervene unilaterally.
But by then, it could be too late, the Time
article continued. The cold truth is that states rarely
undertake military action unless their national interests are
at stake; and the world has yet to reach a consensus about when,
and under what circumstances, coercive interventions in the name
of averting humanitarian disasters are permissible. As the response
to the 2004 tsunami proved, the worlds capacity for mercy
is limitless. But we still havent figured out when to give
war a chance.
In all the humanitarian wars stretching back to
the 1999 interventions in the Balkans and East Timor, the major
powers exploited the plight of the local populations to justify
military action to advance their own strategic and economic interests.
Any military intervention by the international community
in Burma will be for similar objectives and will do little or
nothing to alleviate the plight of the Burmese masses.
See Also:
Why the propaganda campaign for international
intervention in Burma?
[10 May 2008]
Death toll in Burma rises, as major powers
press to intervene
[8 May 2008]
A new Asian disaster: Cyclone kills tens
of thousands in Burma
[7 May 2008]
Bush administration moves to exploit
Burma cyclone disaster
[7 May 2008]
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