Burma raises cyclone death toll to 28,458
By AUNG HLA TUN
Rangoon, May 11: Desperate survivors of Cyclone Nargis headed out of Burma’s Irrawaddy delta in search of food, water and medicine, but aid workers said on Sunday that thousands will die if emergency supplies don’t get through soon.
Buddhist temples and schools on the outskirts of the storm’s trail of destruction are now makeshift refugee centres.
The UN humanitarian agency said in a new assessment that between 1.2 million and 1.9 million were struggling to survive in the aftermath of the storm that struck eight days ago.
"Given the gravity of the situation including the lack of food and water, some partners have reported fears for security, and violent behaviour in the most severely afflicted areas," the United Nations Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said.
It said "the number of deaths could range from 63,290 to 101,682, and 220,000 people are reported to be missing".
It said "acute environmental issues" posed a threat to life and health.
While Burma’s reclusive military government is accepting aid from the outside world, including the United Nations, it will not let in the foreign logistics teams.
"Unless there is a massive and fast infusion of aid, experts and supplies into the hardest-hit areas, there’s going to be a tragedy on an unimaginable scale," said Greg Beck of the International Rescue Committee.
In the delta town of Labutta, where 80 per cent of homes were destroyed, authorities were providing one cup of rice per family per day, a European Union aid official told Reuters.
In a blow to the stumbling relief effort a boat carrying some of the first aid to survivors sank, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies said.
The boat was believed to have hit a submerged tree in the Irrawaddy delta.
The accident highlighted the enormous logistical difficulties of delivering aid, with roads washed away and much of the delta turned to swamp.
Burma raised the death toll on Sunday to 28,458 dead and 33,416 missing from the storm on the night of May 2 and early on May 3.
International agency Oxfam said 1.5 million people are at risk from disease unless a tsunami-like aid effort is mobilised.
"In the Boxing Day tsunami 250,000 people lost their lives in the first few hours, but we did not see an outbreak of disease because the governments and the world mobilised a massive aid effort to prevent it from happening," Oxfam’s regional director for East Asia Sarah Ireland said in Bangkok. "We have to do the same for the people of Burma."
Australia responded to a UN appeal for $187 million in aid by dramatically increasing its contribution to $23.4 million. (Reuters)
The UN World Food Programme said on Sunday it has begun moving aid to its field headquarters in Labutta using trucks provided by its partners in Burma, including the Burma Red Cross. The agency said its food shipments had been briefly impounded on Friday at Rangoon airport.




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