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5,000 sq km of Myanmar still underwater: UN

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by Staff Writers
Bangkok (AFP) May 8, 2008
About 5,000 square kilometres (1,930 square miles) of Myanmar's cyclone-hit regions remain underwater, with more than a million people in need of emergency relief, a UN spokesman said Thursday.

"We're talking about 5,000 square kilometres under water," said Richard Horsey, a Bangkok-based spokesman with the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.

"The bottle-neck (in aid) is getting it out in the delta. That needs boats, helicopters, trucks ... there are upward of one million people in need of help," he added.

Horsey said there was a shortage of boats in the worst-hit areas of the low-lying Irrawaddy delta, with many vessels destroyed in the storm.

Without immediate assistance, the death toll -- officially at nearly 22,000 with about 42,000 missing -- would climb.

"Fairly clearly, we're dealing with a situation where there could be a second round, where people start dying from water-borne diseases," he told AFP.

"There are thousands of bodies floating around in the water," he said, adding that they posed a grave health risk to the survivors.

France and the United States both have ships ready to deliver supplies after the devastating cyclone, but are awaiting the green light from Myanmar's reclusive military, which appears reluctant to let in outside help.

A United Nations plane is currently in Brindisi in southern Italy waiting to fly to Yangon, while the UN refugee agency has 22 tonnes of aid poised on the Myanmar border, waiting for the go-ahead.

Myanmar's military authorities are, however, stalling on issuing visas to aid workers and granting permission for foreign governments to provide relief.

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Analysis: Cyclone shows nature's power
Washington (UPI) May 6, 2008
The cyclone tragedy that has devastated the South Asian nation of Myanmar, formerly Burma, has taken at least 22,000 lives -- a figure that looks certain to climb further as relief operations discover more victims. And it once again teaches the sobering lesson that the wrath of Nature can dwarf the worst excesses of Man.







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