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Burma aid conference: Demands and ultimatums, but little money
for the cyclone victims
By Peter Symonds
27 May 2008
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The only commodities in plentiful supply at the UN-sponsored
donors conference in Rangoon last Sunday were self-interest, cynicism
and hypocrisy. While the gathering had been called to elicit aid
for the estimated 2.4 million cyclone victims in Burma, the US
and European powers exploited the opportunity to repeat their
demands for the Burmese junta to open its doors to foreign aid
efforts. Very little money was forthcoming.
Prior to the conference, the Burmese regime appealed for $10.7
billion to assist in the reconstruction of areas devastated by
the cyclone. As well as immediate relief supplies, farmers and
fishermen in the Irrawaddy delta are in urgent need of assistance
to restore their livelihoods. The UNs Food and Agricultural
Organisation (FAO) has warned of longer term hardship if a new
crop is not planted in the next few weeks in what is known as
the countrys rice bowl. Burmas Prime Minister
Thein Sein told the conference that temporary shelters, rice seeds,
fertilisers and fishing boats were needed as soon as possible.
The response to the appeal was pitiful. International media
reports put the new donations at between $50 million and $150
million, but even this is doubtful. IRIN, the news agency of the
UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, did not
report a total. But it did note that many donors at the
meeting simply outlined the assistance they had already given,
and pledged more if conditions on the ground improved.
The UNs own flash appeal for $201 million
in emergency aid for the cyclone victims has received just $57
million or 28 percent of the total. According to the UNs
Financial Tracking system, another $42 million has been pledged,
but the promises are not binding and, as in previous disasters,
may not materialise. It was not clear if the new aid promises
would go to the UN fund.
The main purpose of the conference was to use offers of aid
as a means of whipping the Burmese junta into line. As one Western
aid official told IRIN: The ball was put by speaker after
speaker in the court of the government. It was if you do
the right thing, we will stand by you. Implicitly, if you dont
there is nothing we can do.
The Bush administration, which has been berating the junta
for failing to help its people, has promised just
$20.5 million in aid. US envoy Scot Marciel told the media in
Rangoon that Washington was prepared to offer much more. However,
in order to do so, the government must allow international disaster
assistance experts to conduct a thorough assessment of the situation,
he added.
American allies chimed in with similar qualifications. According
to the Irrawaddy.org web site, Britain, Denmark, France, Germany,
the Netherlands and Sweden all urged the regime to grant unrestricted
access by relief workers to the Irrawaddy delta. In offering an
additional $27 million, European Commission representative Bernard
Srajner emphasised the need for unimpeded access to
the affected areas. Australia has pledged $25 million but again
only with an international assessment of needs and
unobstructed access.
France was even more emphatic. On the day of the conference,
Paris directed its naval vessel, Mistral, which has been hovering
in international waters near the Burmese coast, to unload its
aid supplies at Phuket in Thailand. A ministry statement declared
that it was particularly shocked that the Myanmar authorities
did not accept that 1,000 tonnes of humanitarian aid could not
be directly unloaded and distributed.
French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner then justified his
countrys refusal to increase assistance by declaring: We
have aid that was very expensive that is just off [Burma]. Now
they ask us for more, when we havent been able to deliver
whats already there. In other words, if the junta
is not prepared to accept aid on French terms, then further assistance
will not be forthcoming. Kouchner has been in the forefront of
calls for the convening an emergency session of the UN Security
Council to directly intervene in Burmawith or without official
permissionincluding by military means.
A political campaign
In the three weeks since Cyclone Nargis ravaged the Irrawaddy
delta, there has been an unrelenting campaign by Western governments
criticising the failure of the Burmese generals to provide sufficient
aid and demanding the country be opened up to aid officials and
foreign militaries. The refusal of the same countries to provide
more than token amounts of aid at Sundays conference demonstrates
that the tragedy is being cynically exploited as a political lever
against the junta. While accusing the Burmese generals of playing
politics with the victims, the US and its allies are doing exactly
the same.
The demand for unimpeded access is never ending.
Calls for aid workers and officials to be allowed to enter Burma
were followed by demands for unfettered access to the Irrawaddy
delta. Denunciations of the regime for failing to allow US military
aircraft to land at Rangoon airport was followed by demands for
French, British and US warships to be given access to the affected
areas. One can confidently predict that if the French naval ship
had been allowed into Burmese waters Kouchner would have quickly
found a new pretext for condemning the junta.
There is no doubt that the Burmese generals are just as inept
in their relief efforts and callous in their disregard for the
cyclone survivors as, for instance, the governments of Indonesia,
Sri Lanka, India and Thailand were in response to the catastrophe
created by the 2004 tsunami. But the incessant demands to open
up to foreign aid are not driven by concern for the hundreds
of thousands of survivors but by ambitions to undermine, destabilise
and ultimately oust the junta. The campaign is a continuation
of the economic sanctions imposed by the US and European powers
to compel the regime to hand power to the so-called democratic
opposition led by Aung San Suu Kyi.
These aims colour every aspect of international media coverage,
which is focussed almost entirely on juntas inadequate relief
efforts. Even the estimates of the number of people receiving
aid vary wildly. One widely reported figure is that just 23 percent
of the estimated 2.4 million survivors have received any aid.
The Wall Street Journal gave another UN figure of 42 percent
getting some kind of emergency assistance. Kathleen
Cravero, UN Development Program director, put the figure at 50
percent of affected people receiving significant aid.
An interesting insight into the relief operations was provided
by Paul Strachan, a British businessman who has been assisting
NGOs in Burma. Writing in last weekends Scotsman,
he appealed for an end to the confrontation with the junta and
pointed out that money, not food and relief supplies, was most
needed.
Contrary to press reports, a good deal of aid is getting
through to the affected areas... Most necessities are available
herethere is a ready supply of freight from China, India
and Thailandand yet the cyclone survivors are being given
bottles of mineral water flown from the UK when local companies
are offering excellent products. Supplies can be sources here
easily and far more cheaply than flying them in. This is mainland
south-east AsiaBurma is surrounded by mass-producing, low
cost, tiger economies. This is not darkest Africa....
There is no need to fly food in, just money, which is lighter,
to buy essentials, Strachan wrote.
Money, however, was exactly what was not on offer at Sundays
conference.
None of this is to deny that a huge tragedy is taking place
in Burma for which the junta bears responsibility. But the very
last consideration of the US and European powers is the plight
of the victims. The catastrophe is simply useful political tool
in ongoing efforts to replace the junta with a regime more sympathetic
to Western economic and strategic interests. Washington, in particular,
regards the Burmese generals as too closely aligned to China,
a growing rival to the US. Demands that Burma opens up
to aid echo the ongoing calls to allow foreign investors into
the country to exploit its cheap labour and resources, including
oil and gas.
There is more than a whiff of colonial arrogance in the international
efforts to pressure Burma into line. In a comment entitled Save
us from the rescuers in the Los Angeles Times on
May 18, writer David Rieff pointed to the rapidity with which
demands for military intervention in Burma had surfaced. Aid
is one thing. But aid at the point of a gun is taking the humanitarian
enterprise to a place it should never go. And the fact that calls
for humanitarian war were ringing out within days of Cyclone Nargis
is emblematic of how the interventionist impulse, now matter how
well-intended, is extremely dangerous, he stated.
After recalling that the motivations of 19th century
European colonialism were also presented by supporters as being
grounded in humanitarian concern, Rieff wrote: Lastly,
it is critically important to pay attention to just who is talking
about military intervention on humanitarian grounds. Well, among
others, its the foreign ministers of the two great 19th
century colonial empires. And where exactly do they want to intervenesorry,
where do they want to live up to their responsibility to protect?
Mostly in the very countries they used to rule.
As if on cue, French writer and philosopher Bernard-Henri Levy
wrote a diatribe in Saturdays Australian, which concluded
that perhaps French colonialism had not been so bad after all.
Entitled Put Burmas murderous dictators in the dock,
the article was more a string of expletives than an argument.
According to Levy, the junta was variously crazy, criminally insane,
racist, xenophobic, paranoid, monomaniacal, autistic, mafia-like,
stingy and grotesque.
After exhausting his list of adjectives, Levy declared: Faced
with this spectacle, this machine of death, hate and madness,
one hesitates between sorrow, pity, a desire to see these assassins
brought before an international criminal tribunal and, finally,
the days when France created and imposed upon the world the right
and the duty to intervene.
That the virtues of French colonial rule, which gave the world
such horrors as the wars in Indo-China and Algeria, can be conjured
up without the slightest embarrassment is perhaps the clearest
indication of what lies behind Kouchners campaign to intervene
in Burma.
See Also:
More threats of international intervention
amid continuing Burmese cyclone disaster
[22 August 2008]
Cyclone disaster worsens in Burma
[12 May 2008]
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]
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