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Author Topic: U.N. Suspends Aid Shipments to Myanmar After Government Confiscates the Donation  (Read 2348 times)
Dr. Blutarsky
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« on: May 09, 2008, 09:25:35 AM »

U.N. Suspends Aid Shipments to Myanmar After Government Confiscates the Donations

Friday , May 09, 2008

AP
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YANGON, Myanmar  ?
The U.N. is suspending aid shipments to Myanmar after the government began seizing the supplies.

A U.N. official said Myanmar's junta has confiscated all the food and equipment that the World Food Program had flown into the country for cyclone victims.

WFP spokesman Paul Risley said Friday that the WFP "has no choice" but to suspend further aid shipments until the matter is resolved. Risley said all "the food aid and equipment that we managed to get in has been confiscated." The shipment included 38 tons of high-energy biscuits.

Risley said it is not clear why the material was seized. It was also not clear if the shipment seized was the one that was flown in Thursday or another one.

Earlier Friday, the U.N. blasted Myanmar's military government, saying its refusal to let in foreign aid workers to help victims of a devastating cyclone was "unprecedented" in the history of humanitarian work.

While the junta dithered and appeared overwhelmed by Saturday's disaster ? the worst in the country's records ? more than 1 million homeless people waited for food, shelter and medicine, many crammed in Buddhist monasteries or just camped in the open.

? Click here to see photos.

Entire villages have been submerged in the worst-hit Irrawaddy delta with bodies floating in salty water and children ripped from their parents arms. At least 62,000 people are dead or missing. Aid groups have warned that thousands of children may have been orphaned and a medical disaster is waiting to happen.

A Norway-based opposition news network, the Democratic Voice of Burma, provided graphic details of misery in the Irrawaddy delta, where few foreign reporters have been able to reach because roads have been flooded and bridges washed away.

In the village of Kongyangon, someone had written in Burmese, "We are all in trouble. Please come help us" on the black asphalt, a DVB video showed. A few feet away was another plea: "We're hungry," the words too small to be seen by air rescuers.

Grim assessments about the immediate future continued.

"The delta region is known as the country's granary and the cyclone has hit before the harvest. If the harvest has been destroyed this will have a devastating impact on food security in Myanmar," said the aid group Action Against Hunger.

? Click here for video.

In Yangon itself, the price of increasingly scarce water shot up by more than 500 percent while rice and oil jumped by 60 percent over the last three days, Action Against Hunger said in a statement.

Hardships in the country's largest city have prompted some embassies, including that of the United States, to send diplomats' families out of the country.

But in an e-mail to The Associated Press, the top U.S. diplomat in Yangon, Shari Villarosa, denied rumors that the entire embassy was being evacuated.

? China Urges Myanmar to Work With International Community On Disaster Aid

"We have gone to Authorized Departure to permit family members to depart the country until the situation stabilizes," she said.

The junta said Friday it was grateful to the international community for its assistance, which has included 11 chartered planes loaded with aid supplies. But it said in a statement that the best way to help was to just send in material rather than personnel.

It said one relief flight was sent back after landing in Yangon on Thursday because it carried a search and rescue team and media who had not received permission to enter the country. It did not give details, but said the plane had flown in from Qatar, which apparently referred to one of the four U.N. flights that was allowed in with high-energy biscuits.

According to the state-media 22,997 people died and 42,019 are missing from Cyclone Nargis. Villarosa, who heads the U.S. Embassy in Yangon, said the number of dead could eventually exceed 100,000 because of post-cyclone illnesses.

On Friday, Japan said it will give aid worth $10 million through the U.N. to Myanmar, adding to the massive amounts of aid that has been pledged by foreign governments.

While accepting the aid, the isolationist regime of this Southeast Asian nation has refused to grant visas to foreign aid workers who could assess the extent of the disaster and manage the logistics.

Paul Risley, a spokesman for the U.N. World Food Program, said the organization has submitted 10 visa applications around the world, including six in Bangkok, Thailand, but that none has been approved.

Even if the government changes its mind, there is no hope of getting any visas in Bangkok until Monday because of a Thai holiday that shut the Myanmar Embassy on Friday, Risley said.

"The frustration caused by what appears to be a paperwork delay is unprecedented in modern humanitarian relief efforts," said Risley, who is based in Bangkok. "It's astonishing."

"We strongly urge the government of Myanmar to process these visa applications as quickly as possible, including work over the weekend," he said.

The junta also is preoccupied with holding a referendum on Saturday on a new constitution that is expected to cement the military's grip on power. The referendum has been postponed in certain cyclone-hit areas.

The New York-based Human Rights Watch joined others in urging Myanmar to postpone the referendum entirely and to focus on "relieving the horrendous human suffering."

Protesters gathered outside the Myanmar Embassy in Australia and the Philippines Friday, demanding the referendum be postponed.

Myanmar has banned vehicles from going in and out of the country into neighboring Thailand during the referendum, said Thai police Lt. Natawut Tamaput at a border post in Mae Sai, opposite the Myanmar town of Tachilek.

Thailand is hosting a virtual army of relief groups poised to rush into Myanmar with critical aid and experts once permission is granted.

However, few in Myanmar believed the junta would relent.

"Believe me, the government will not allow outsiders to go into the devastated area," said Yangon food shop owner Joseph Kyaw.

"The government only cares about its own stability. They don't care about the plight of the people," he said.

Among those waiting in Thailand were members of the USAID Disaster Assistance Response Team. Air Force transport planes and helicopters packed with supplies also sat waiting for a green light to enter Myanmar.

"We are in a long line of nations who are ready, willing and able to help, but also, of course, in a long line of nations the Burmese don't trust," U.S. Ambassador Eric John told reporters in Bangkok.

By rejecting the U.S. aid offer, the junta is refusing to take advantage of Washington's enormous ability to deliver aid quickly, which was evident during the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami that killed 230,000 people in a dozen nations.

The first foreign military aid following that disaster reached the hardest-hit nation, Indonesia, two days later. The most significant help came when U.S. helicopters from the USS Abraham Lincoln began flying relief missions to isolated communities along the Indonesian coast.

Tim Costello, chief executive of World Vision Australia, said that "it's certainly the case that the Americans, as they showed in the tsunami, have extraordinary capacity."

Thai Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej told reporters Friday that he will try to go to Myanmar on Sunday to persuade the junta to accept U.S. help.

But the junta told Samak his Myanmar counterpart is too busy to meet with him, said a Thai army general, speaking on condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to speak to the media.

http://www.foxnews.com/printer_friendly_story/0,3566,354665,00.html
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« Reply #1 on: May 09, 2008, 09:26:35 AM »

Sad to see that the junta in Burma does not give a shit about its people at all.
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« Reply #2 on: May 09, 2008, 10:06:07 AM »

Exactly.
Too bad that the people there due to the restricted and censored media won't be able to read or see these things at all.
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« Reply #3 on: May 09, 2008, 10:20:43 AM »


Even if the government changes its mind, there is no hope of getting any visas in Bangkok until Monday because of a Thai holiday that shut the Myanmar Embassy on Friday, Risley said.


You can't expect people to work during a holiday, that's just not right  Roll Eyes
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« Reply #4 on: May 12, 2008, 04:10:35 AM »

Exactly.
Too bad that the people there due to the restricted and censored media won't be able to read or see these things at all.


They might in a small while. The junta in Burma did hand out over 20 tvs and 10 dvd sets... some might argue that it's not very useful in an area where there's no electricity at the moment, but don't you judge them.

It's a sad situation, though getting better if I've understood correctly.
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« Reply #5 on: May 12, 2008, 10:27:29 AM »

Wonder where the junta gets the money for their weapons. ok
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« Reply #6 on: May 13, 2008, 05:50:01 PM »

It gets worse........

 UN warns of 'second catastrophe' in Myanmar

by Hla Hla Htay 2 hours, 16 minutes ago

YANGON (AFP) - The United Nations warned Tuesday that Myanmar faced a "second catastrophe" after its devastating cyclone, unless the junta immediately allows massive air and sea deliveries of aid.
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But Myanmar's military rulers again rejected growing international pressure to open the door to a foreign-run relief effort, insisting against all the evidence that they could handle the emergency alone.

The United Nations aired its "increasing frustration" at not being able to bring more help to 1.5 million of the neediest survivors, and said the crisis in the country's remote, flooded south posed an "enormous logistic challenge."

It requires "at least an air or sea corridor to channel aid in large quantities as quickly as possible," said Elisabeth Byrs, spokeswoman in Geneva for the UN's emergency relief arm.

"We fear a second catastrophe."

But the junta said Tuesday that the needs of the people after the storm, which has left around 62,000 dead or missing since ripping through the southern Irrawaddy delta on May 3, "have been fulfilled to an extent."

"The nation does not need skilled relief workers yet," Vice Admiral Soe Thein said in the New Light of Myanmar newspaper, a mouthpiece for the military, which has ruled the nation with an iron grip for nearly half a century.

Although aid flights are increasing, there are serious bottlenecks in getting supplies to the delta.

Many survivors said they had still not received help from the government 10 days after the disaster, and could not understand why their leaders have snubbed offers of help that have poured in from around the world.

Aid agencies warn that as every day passes without sufficient food, water and shelter, more are at risk of joining the staggering death toll, estimated by the UN at 100,000.

The World Health Organisation said it had dispatched supplies of body bags, as experts warned that corpses were going uncollected and that the putrefying remains pose a major health risk.

Heavy rains overnight deepened the misery for many, seeping through the flimsy plastic sheeting of makeshift shelters of tens of thousands of people whose homes were sunk or blown away in the storm.

"These new rains are bringing us more misery," said Taye Win, a survivor sheltering at a monastery outside the country's main city Yangon. "I don't know how long we can withstand this."

The UN said child traffickers are targeting the youngest and most vulnerable survivors of the catastrophe, and that two suspects have already been arrested after trying to recruit children at a relief camp.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon took aim at the regime, using unusually strong language to insist that outside experts be allowed in immediately to help direct the fumbling relief effort.

"We are at a critical point. Unless more aid gets into the country very quickly, we face an outbreak of infectious diseases that could dwarf today's current crisis," he said.

"I therefore call in the most strenuous terms on the government of Myanmar to put its people's lives first. It must do all it can to prevent this disaster from becoming even more serious."

British Foreign Secretary David Miliband also blasted the junta, saying its "callous disregard" for its people was hampering the supply of aid.

European Union development ministers held emergency talks Tuesday to seek ways to convince the junta to open its doors.

After the meeting, they urged "the authorities in Myanmar to offer free and unfettered access to international humanitarian experts, including the expeditious delivery of visa and travel permits."

The bloc's aid chief Louis Michel said the Myanmar regime has granted him a visa and that he would leave later Tuesday for the country, where he is expected to stress that no political strings are attached to foreign aid.

In Washington, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said the United States had no plans for a forced intervention in Myanmar to provide aid to cyclone victims.

"We are doing everything that we can because this is a humanitarian, not a political issue. We want to make very clear that our only desire is to help the people of Burma," she said.

Myanmar's generals remain deeply suspicious of the outside world and fearful of any foreign influence which could weaken their control on every aspect of life in this poor and isolated nation, formerly known as Burma.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20080513/ts_afp/myanmarweathercyclone
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« Reply #7 on: May 13, 2008, 06:17:47 PM »

In a way I respect their decision to keep outsiders away, but in such an extreme circumstance, all that shit goes out the window.  They need to think of their people at this point.  Absolutely ridiculous.  If it wouldn't cause another war, I'd pull 15,000 troops out of Iraq and get them into Myanmar with the supplies and dare their government to stop us.  It sickens me to think of those people suffering. 
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Dr. Blutarsky
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« Reply #8 on: May 13, 2008, 06:21:25 PM »

I'll bet that The Junta does not want to let outsiders in so the outside world doesn't see how badly they are treating their own people.
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« Reply #9 on: May 14, 2008, 12:44:49 AM »

It is horrible the number of people who have died in the last week.
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