Under Pressure, Myanmar To Let In More Aid
Junta Slowly Dropping Ban On Foreign Workers; U.N. Envoy Tours Hardest-Hit Region
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Play CBS Video Video Slow Start On Myanmar Aid Myanmar's military government is slowly allowing relief workers inside the isolated, cyclone-ravaged country. But as Allen Pizzey reports, aid groups say help is not arriving fast enough.
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Survivors of Cyclone Nargis rush to get first in line to receive donated goods from a local donor at a monastery outside the capital of Yangon, Myanmar on Monday May 19, 2008. (AP Photo/Petr David Josek)
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Hundreds of children, survivors of Cyclone Nargis, cover their heads from the rain with empty aluminum plates, as they await a plate of rice, a spoonful of curry and a potato from a private donation center in Laputta town, Irrawaddy Delta, Myanmar, May 15, 2008. (AP Photo)
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The French vessel Le Mistral before departing Wednesday from Chennai, India with enough food to feed 100,000 people for 15 days. The Myanmar government has refused to allow the ship into its territorial waters, so the relief supplies remain parked off Myanmar's coast. (AP/Sgt. Nelson, ECPA-D FDM)
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A homeless Myanmar girl salvages some items from a cyclone-ravaged house at the outskirts of Yangon, Myanmar on Saturday May 17, 2008. Aid groups have said the death toll from Cyclone Nargis is probably about 128,000, with many more deaths possible from disease and starvation unless help is provided quickly to some 2.5 million survivors. (AP Photo)
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Photo Essay Left In Cyclone's Wake Countless people in Myanmar left homeless by deadly storm.
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Photo Essay Feeding Myanmar's Hungry With aid slow to arrive, local donors try to fill the void.
At least 134,000 people were killed or left missing in the May 2-3 cyclone, and another 2.5 million people are living in poor conditions, most of them without shelter, enough food, drinking water or medical care.
Singapore's foreign minister said Monday during a meeting of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations that Myanmar's junta had made the long-awaited concession to allow in a wave of aid workers.
Meanwhile, the regime allowed the U.N. humanitarian chief into the devastated Irrawaddy delta for a brief tour Monday, a U.N. official said.
But the United Nations said its foreign staff were still barred from the delta and described conditions there as "terrible," with hundreds of thousands of cyclone victims suffering from hunger, disease and lack of adequate shelter.
John Holmes, the U.N. undersecretary-general for humanitarian affairs, flew by helicopter to the delta before returning to Myanmar's largest city, Yangon, for a working lunch with international aid agencies, said a U.N. official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak with the media.
Others, including U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, will also be allowed into the disaster zone this week in an apparent effort to deflect criticism that the government is not managing the relief operations properly.
An Asian diplomat said Myanmar has invited at least three representatives of several countries to tour the delta Friday. He spoke on condition of anonymity because the news has not been made public.
Ban is to travel to the delta after his scheduled arrival in the country Wednesday, U.N. spokeswoman Michele Montas said in New York.
"The Secretary General will arrive on Wednesday in Yangon and travel to the Delta, and he hopes to meet with senior government officials to work with Myanmar authorities to dramatically accelerate the flow of disaster relief to victims," UNSG Press Spokesperson Michele Montas confirmed to CBS News.
CBS News Foreign Affairs analyst Pamela Falk reports that the trip is aimed at increasing pressure on the junta to allow food and aid workers into the country.
“The U.N. Secretary-General was unusually critical of the military junta in Myanmar for delaying aid deliveries and, last week, scolded the government, which has not returned his calls or letters,” Falk added. “Although some U.S. and U.N. aid shipments have been allowed by Myanmar's government, delays have impeded the relief effort.”
Earlier, junta leader Senior Gen. Than Shwe had refused to take telephone calls from Ban and had not responded to two letters from him, Montas said. Holmes, who arrived in Yangon on Sunday, was to deliver a third letter about how the U.N. can assist the government's immediate and long-term relief effort.
"With the visit of John Holmes and the U.N. secretary-general on Wednesday I hope the government will really accept all the international support that is necessary," Ramesh Shrestha, head of the U.N. Children's Fund in Myanmar, told The Associated Press.
"At this time of crisis, everyone needs to set aside their ideological issues. We need to resolve this right now," he said.
Also Monday, Myanmar state-controlled television news announced a three-day period of mourning for the victims of the cyclone. It starts on Tuesday.
China, one of the few countries to have normal diplomatic relations with Myanmar, began three days of mourning Monday for the victims of a May 12 earthquake. Officials estimate that as many as 50,000 people were killed.
Amanda Pitt, a U.N. spokeswoman in Bangkok, said the world body was seeing "some progress in terms of pipelines starting to come through" but that the aid operation for Myanmar was still unsatisfactory.
"Clearly we're still not satisfied, which is why we keep saying we need to upscale the response. We're not satisfied with it, nobody is. We can see the situation is terrible," she said.
We need to upscale the response. We're not satisfied with it, nobody is. We can see the situation is terrible.
Amanda Pitt, U.N. spokeswomanCritics have accused the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), a 10-member bloc that includes Myanmar, of doing little so far to persuade the ruling generals to rapidly let in outside help, especially disaster experts.
European Union nations have warned the junta could be committing a crime against humanity by blocking aid intended for up to 2.5 million survivors faced with hunger, loss of their homes and potential outbreaks of deadly diseases.
But signs have appeared that the generals might be listening to the chorus of criticism.
A team of 50 Chinese medics arrived in Yangon on Sunday night, following in the footsteps of medical personnel from India and Thailand, the official Chinese news agency Xinhua reported. On Monday some 30 Thai doctors and nurses began working in the delta - exceptions to the regime's ban on foreign aid workers in the area.
A senior British official hinted Sunday that a breakthrough may also be near that would allow foreign military ships to join the relief effort, but warnings grew of a potential second wave of deaths, this time among children who lack fresh water and proper shelter.
British Foreign Office Minister Lord Malloch-Brown told the British Broadcasting Corp. that he believes the rulers of Myanmar - also known as Burma - might soon relent and let Western military ships help out, especially if Asian go-betweens are involved.
Myanmar's state-run media lashed out at critics of the regime's response to the disaster, detailing the junta's efforts. State television showed Than Shwe inspecting supplies and comforting homeless victims in relatively clean and neat rows of blue tents.
The media said Than Shwe traveled from the capital, Naypyitaw, to relief camps in the Hlaing Thar Yar and Dagon suburbs of Yangon.
Some survivors clasped their hands and bowed as he and a column of military leaders walked past. At least 78,000 people were killed in the May 2-3 storm and another 56,000 were missing.
The official New Light of Myanmar newspaper said the government's National Disaster Preparedness Central Committee will work with foreign aid agencies "to ensure that all relief funds and supplies reach the storm victims."
Myanmar will also work with ASEAN countries to help cyclone-stricken areas in a rehabilitation drive that will be planned over the next several days, the newspaper said, quoting Deputy Foreign Minister Kyaw Thu.
The situation remained grim in the Irrawaddy delta south of Yangon.
In the delta city of Laputta, hundreds of children covered their heads from the rain with empty aluminum plates as they lined up in front of a private donation center. They were given rice, a spoonful of curry and a potato.
"Children only. Please. Children only," shouted a man who pushed back a crowd of adults. He explained they were feeding children and the elderly first because food supplies were limited and most adults could still fend for themselves.
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- Once the International community gets in there to administer aid, the military dictators should be rounded up, immersed in water, and starved to death.
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- because the world is not going over this government head maybe the world wants ethnic cleansing to get rid of what this government calls undesirables?
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- YOU CANT BLAME THEM FROM NOT WANTING HALIBURTON WAR CRIMINALS IN THEIR COUNTRY!
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- The Myanmar junta raises its middle finger to the UN, and the UN cries like a little girl. Waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa!
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- What are the precautions the Asian aid workers should take? What are the three scenarios they should be aware of? In case of another attempt at people%u2019s power revolution from the part of regime opponents, politicizing the disaster and capitalizing the presence of foreign troops in the vicinity, that of international aid workers and the unusual attention of international media, the Burmese military government will immediately attempt, euphemistically speaking, to maintain law and order; they might succeed in so doing. The Burmese military government might also wait for a few days and may restore law and order only later as last year in Burma or as in Tibet. Even its earlier, less decisive, attempts might FAIL. The 2nd and 3rd scenarios would inevitably result in the withdrawal of its troops from some areas, as in 1988 in Burma, leaving the population (and Asian aid workers) to face the Hobbesian dilemma to choose between the anarchy and Leviathan state. In anticipation of the 2ndand 3rd scenarios, the relief workers are advised to seek accommodation in the high-rise hotels where the helicopter rescues are possible. Yes, it will cost forty or fifty dollars more than the small, family-run, motels which cost ten or twenty dollars per night. In order to be able to immediately rescue the relief workers out there in the field, it is necessary for them to instantaneously update their location to the local authorities or even higher authorities, including the relevant ministries.
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- The problem with inviting Asian relief workers into Burma to help with the cyclone relief operations is that the Western governments would be less concerned for their security and the regime opponents might act more recklessly. On the other hand, the Asian relief workers would be more willing to stay inside their lodgings during a crackdown in case of another attempt at people%u2019s power revolution than their Western counterparts. The death of the under-covered Japanese reporter might probably make them more aware of the fact that it is very difficult to distinguish them from the Burmese regime opponents taking the streets to oust the military government. The best would be for the Burmese regime opponents to self-restrain from their unwise decisions/actions. So far, no sign of self-restraint from the part of regime opponents, their state/non-state supporters and the sympathetic media have been found. It is better safe than sorry, just in case of the unthinkable.
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