YANGON, Myanmar, May 16, 2008

Junta Keeps Aid Workers From Victims

Military Government In Myanmar Won't Allow Aid Workers, Journalists, Or Foreigners Into Affected Areas

  • The military junta in Myanmar has tightened security around the cyclone ravaged regions of the country, blocking aid workers, journalists and foreign diplomats.

    The military junta in Myanmar has tightened security around the cyclone ravaged regions of the country, blocking aid workers, journalists and foreign diplomats.  (AP)

  • Play CBS Video Video Misery Continues In Myanmar

    Although slight progress has been made, Myanmar survivors are waiting for their government to allow life-saving foreign aid into their country. Allen Pizzey reports.

  • Video U.S. Aid Reaches Myanmar

    A U.S. relief plane arrived in Myanmar after more than a week of negotiations with the country's isolationist government. Allen Pizzey reports.

  • Video Myanmar Aid Trickling In

    The first U.S. planeload of aid for Myanmar is soon to fly into the country and relief from other countries is slowly tricking in. But, as Priya David reports, there are still many obstacles.

(AP)  Myanmar's military rulers have thrown a tightening ring of security around Yangon, blocking aid workers, foreign diplomats and journalists from reaching cyclone-battered regions where millions need food and medicine.

New roadblocks staffed by armed police have sprung up around Myanmar's largest city. Authorities at the checkpoints record passport information and license plate numbers and sometimes interrogate drivers and their foreign passengers before ordering them to return to Yangon.

"A circle has been drawn around Yangon and expats are confined there. While you are getting aid through, it's like getting it through a 3-inch pipe, not a 30-inch pipe," said Tim Costello, president of the aid agency World Vision-Australia, in Yangon.

"Foreigners can't go this way," a policeman told a driver for a foreign journalist Friday at a checkpoint with 10 police and an immigration official dressed in khaki.

The reporter was heading north of Yangon, not even in the direction of the Irrawaddy delta, where Cyclone Nagris spent its greatest fury two weeks ago. The United Nations says more than 100,000 people may have perished, while up to 2.5 million survivors face starvation and disease.

In the week after the storm hit, entry by foreigners into the delta was difficult but not impossible. However, the security cordon has been noticeably tightened in recent days, with numerous new roadblocks thrown up along roads leading south and west into the delta from Yangon.

Some diplomats will be taken on a visit to the delta by the Foreign Ministry on Saturday, said U.S. Ambassador Shari Villarosa. Diplomats, who must seek official permission to travel outside Yangon, have faced the same barriers in trying to enter the affected region.

Even the few tourists remaining in Yangon cannot now take a ferry across the city's Rangoon River, visit townships in the immediate Yangon area or travel to tourist sites elsewhere in the country.

"I tried to leave again yesterday, hoping to go to the Golden Rock, but they wouldn't let me board a bus after checking my ID," said Michael Emery, a university student from Australia who said he plans to leave Myanmar because he is being confined to Yangon. The Golden Rock temple is a popular tourist destination about 120 miles southeast of Yangon.

The director of an international aid organization said he managed to penetrate the hardest-hit Irrawaddy region by taking roundabout routes to towns 100 miles to 150 miles from Yangon. He ended up driving a 22 hours round trip to spend just two hours in the area, and returned to Yangon on Monday.

He spoke on condition of anonymity because he did not want restrictions on his agency's travel in the future.

Earlier, others who managed to reach severely hit towns like Laputta and Bogalay were ordered out before they could enter the evacuation centers in which thousands of homeless, sick and hungry are huddled.

"Things will still get done but they will not be done as effectively, efficiently or as quickly which means delays, which means increasing risk (for survivors)," said Steve Marshall, a U.N. staffer interviewed in Bangkok, Thailand, on Friday after arriving from Myanmar.

From the start, the isolationist regime has restricted foreign involvement in the crisis, saying it welcomes outside aid but not outside experts.

"It has been very clear: 'Don't try to leave Yangon or you could compromise your arrangement with the government,"' Costello said. "There is a visible fence around Yangon that we don't dare cross."

Myanmar staffers of international agencies such as World Vision, Save the Children and U.N. organizations have been permitted into the delta and the government has made only one exception to the no-foreigners order. Thailand planned to send in Saturday a 30-member medical team that has been promised access, while about 130 aid workers from China, India and Bangladesh may follow them into the delta.

The four countries, especially China, have close political ties with Myanmar, which is widely criticized by Western nations and activist groups of suppressing pro-democracy forces and trampling on human rights.


© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment
by tucano2 May 18, 2008 1:55 AM EDT
Well at least the victims in Burma are getting better treatment from their government than we did here post-Katrina from our government...so that''s where "good job Brownie" wound up?
Reply to this comment
by ubrew12 May 17, 2008 8:00 PM EDT
FloydZepp said: "truthyness: You post this same stupid thing [The Republicans are playing Blacks for fools] about a billion times a day. Its still not true."

Truthyness understands something from the Republican playbook: say it enough times...
Reply to this comment
by antoniof123 May 17, 2008 5:51 PM EDT
MaCain''s buddies back these people keep up the good work MaCain.
Reply to this comment
by downsteamjim May 17, 2008 3:52 PM EDT
To ubrew12: I can see Myanmar protesting this attack on the peace loving mosquitoes and pestilence.
Reply to this comment
by ubrew12 May 17, 2008 2:22 PM EDT
All the Irrawaddy delta people need immediately is food, water filters or tablets, mosquito netting, and plastic tarping. All of it is waterproof. Just toss out the aid packages from a plane and give the locals some relief. Give the junta the middle finger on your way back to pick up more supplies. Why are we waiting? Its not like its complicated.
Reply to this comment
by downsteamjim May 17, 2008 1:15 PM EDT
The junta is just a bunch of commies backed by China. China loves genocide such as Dafar [China backs Sudanese govt.], remember Pol Pot in Cambodia [China supported them].
Reply to this comment
by sistatee-2009 May 17, 2008 9:26 AM EDT
As usual, the thugs with the guns get all the food. Keep this in mind when the U.N. decides to disarm American citizens.
Reply to this comment
by naucoming4u May 17, 2008 9:16 AM EDT
Jeff, Momma, Deacon:

There are 2 simple reasons why the Bush Admin will not invade/overthrow the Junta in Myanmar/Burma...

1. There''s not enough oil resources in that country

2. We are tied down in Iraq and do not have the military resources to spare.

And chalk that up to yet another example of the lack of priorities of this country! Also, the UN is too weak to enforce ANYTHING, let alone a complete regime change! They have no military.

But yes, the urge to want to wipe out the Junta is also very annoying to me, especially with stories such as this article.
Reply to this comment
by deacon20081 May 17, 2008 6:59 AM EDT
The UN should invade in masse and wipe out these scum sucking rulers. Bushco needs a legacy aside from utter failure? Great save millions of lives and act.
Reply to this comment
by mommakat64 May 17, 2008 4:07 AM EDT
Ask nyeinc...he seems to be right up there "in the know" about everything the "generals" do.

I don''t know that attacking would help the situation...there''s really enough death and destuction as it is. But, if we can get the UN to pull their collective heads out of the sand and take a firm stand on this situation...a world wide condemnation. Something has got to be done...a guarded "tour" of one area isn''t cutting it.
Reply to this comment

Exclusive Webshow

Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie." Watch Now

Latest News
News in Pictures
Scroll Left Scroll Right
Connect with CBS News

Stay connected with the CBS News using your favorite social networks and online news applications: