Oxfam warns 1.5 million at risk in Myanmar | World News - Hindustan Times
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Oxfam warns 1.5 million at risk in Myanmar

AP | By, Yangon
May 11, 2008 01:36 PM IST

More food reached Myanmar's hungry cyclone victims as roads were cleared of fallen trees, but a British aid group warned that up to 1.5 million face death.

More food reached Myanmar's hungry cyclone victims as roads were cleared of fallen trees, but a British aid group warned that up to 1.5 million face death if they do not get clean water and sanitation soon.

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"It's really crucial that people get access to clean water sources and sanitation to avoid unnecessary deaths and suffering," Oxfam's regional chief Sarah Ireland told reporters in Bangkok, Thailand.

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She said the toll from the May 3 cyclone could go up to 100,000 - a figure also suggested by other aid groups and a top U.S. diplomat. "There are all the factors for a public health catastrophe which could multiply that death toll by up to 15 times," she said. Myanmar's military junta said 23,335 people died and 37,019 were missing after Cyclone Nargis slammed into the country's Irrawaddy delta.

The U.N. said about 2 million people were severely affected. Yet the government has refused to let in foreign experts who have experience in handling humanitarian disasters. It insists it is capable of distributing the aid, as long as enough of it is sent by international donors.

The U.N. says some progress has been made in delivering aid. UN staff in Myanmar were reporting "significant progress in clearing roadways, and the piped water supply has been partially restored to some parts of Yangon city," said an internal U.N. report seen by The Associated Press.

It said helicopter loads of international aid arriving in Yangon were being relayed to Pathein for distribution in the Irrawaddy delta.

The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies said three of its planes delivered 14 tons of shelter material, replenishing its stocks already in the country before the cyclone.

"Aid is getting through in increased amounts," the federation said in a statement.

So far the humanitarian effort has supported 220,000 people, it said. A further seven flights were expected to arrive Monday carrying 20 tons of shelter material, jerry cans and 2,000 mosquito nets.

But aid group World Visions, which has a big presence in Myanmar, said relief material delivered so far is a drop in the ocean. "It is very obvious that of the thousands of people who have been helped there are tens of thousands who have not be reached," World Vision's Samson Jeyakumar said in Bangkok. He said its supplies were running out in Yangon.

Many survivors have been without help for more than a week after fleeing their inundated villages to take shelter in monasteries and schools in towns. The canals and flooded roads to higher ground were littered with the bloated bodies of humans and animals. The stench of death was everywhere.

"What is critical at the moment is water sources," said Oxfam's Ireland.

"We understand a lot of water sources are contaminated. Ponds are full of dead bodies. Something as basic as a bucket is in scarce supply. If people don't have water that is clean and safe, that is very difficult," she said.

"With floodwaters fouling water supplies and latrines overflowing with human waste, all the factors for an outbreak of cholera and shigella are in place," an Oxfam statement said. Stagnant waters can breed mosquitoes, raising fears of dengue and malaria.

Another Oxfam official, Ian Woolverton, said although the aid group has warned of a possible 1.5 million deaths, that was a worst-case forecast and one that could be prevented. At relief camps, long lines of people waited to collect rations of rice and oil . Where there were no camps, people clustered on roadsides hoping for handouts. "Help us!" was written in chalk on the side of one home.

"Please, don't wait too long," said Ma Thein Htwe, 49, who waited with dozens of other women and children at a monastery in Kungyangon for her ration of rice.

Ko Zaw Min, 27, said not enough aid was reaching his community. Each family was given only about a pound (about half a kilogram) of rice a day.

"I want to build my home where it used to stand, in the field over there," said the farmer, who lost his 9-year-old son and a month-old baby in the disaster. "But I have nothing." Debbie Stothard, head of the Southeast Asian human rights group ALTSEAN-Burma, said the ruling generals were manipulating aid and delivering it selectively, ignoring the needy. Myanmar is also known as Burma.

"Even in Yangon area, which is reachable by the regime, people are complaining they are not getting aid. What they are getting is rotting rice," she said, she told Associated Press Television News in Bangkok.

Myanmar's junta has also been criticized for holding a referendum on Saturday on a new constitution aimed at solidifying its hold on power.

The referendum seeks public approval of a new constitution, guarantees 25 percent of parliamentary seats to the military and allows the president to hand over all power to the military in a state of emergency - elements critics say defy the junta's professed commitment to democracy.

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