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MYANMAR:
UN OFFERS FUNDS FOR CYCLONE
HIT COUNTRY, 06/05/2008
(MaximsNews Network)
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UNITED
NATIONS - / MaximsNews Network / 06
May 2008 -- The
top UN humanitarian official announced today that he is prepared to provide a
grant from the Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF)
to help those affected by the deadly cyclone which struck southeast Myanmar
over the weekend.
“The
Government of Myanmar has indicated that they are open to international
assistance. We appreciate the Government’s announcement that it is making
available approximately $5 million from its own resources for emergency
relief, and I am ready to allocate a significant amount from the CERF as the
most urgent needs become clear,” said
Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief
Coordinator John Holmes.
Cyclone
Nargis, which made landfall in the Irrawaddy delta region on Friday, left
thousands of people dead in its wake and hundreds of thousands without
shelter. With winds of over 190 kilometres per hour, the storm, which hit
Yangon later that same night, tore down trees and power lines and causing
widespread flooding.
Myanmar
authorities have declared five regions – Yangon, Ayeyarwwady, Bago, Mon and
Kayin – disaster areas. The population of the declared disaster areas is
estimated at 24 million, with an estimated 6 million in Yangon. More than
3,000 people are reportedly missing in Ayeyarwady Division alone.
The UN
Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA)
has said the number of people in need of assistance is expected to be
“sizeable.” The most urgent needs, according to the UN Country Team in
Myanmar, include shelter, water purification tablets, cooking sets, mosquito
nets, emergency health kits and food.
A UN
Disaster Assessment and Coordination (UNDAC)
team is being dispatched to Myanmar and is expected to begin work shortly.
Lack of communications has hampered efforts to obtain accurate information on
the impacts of the storm and on populations affected.
Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon noted
yesterday that the lack of communications has made it difficult to ascertain
the extent of the casualties and damage, but stressed that the UN is prepared
extend necessary assistance and to mobilize international aid in support of
the Government, if needed.
UN
agencies have already begun working to address the situation. The UN refugee
agency is emptying its emergency shelter material stockpiles in neighbouring
Thailand of plastic sheeting and tents for some 10,000 people for urgent
dispatch to Yangon. The supplies would be distributed through a Disaster
Management Committee that had been established by the Myanmar Government.
Jennifer
Pagonis, spokesperson for the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), told
journalists in Geneva that the agency’s office in Myanmar yesterday
purchased $50,000 worth of urgently needed basic supplies in Yangon for
distribution, including emergency tarpaulins, plastic sheeting and canned
food.
In
addition, the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has dispatched five assessment
teams to three of the affected areas and is positioning relief supplies. The
agency says
it will work with partners and the Government to provide access to clean
water, safe sanitation and improved hygiene, and will seek to protect children
and help them return to school as soon as possible.
The
emergence of water borne and vector borne diseases are a major concern for the
UN World Health Organization (WHO),
which has stressed the need to have access to potable water to avoid diseases.
Noting that malaria is present in the part of the country hit by the storm,
the agency also stressed the need for insecticide-treated mosquito nets for
those affected.
Meanwhile,
the head of the secretariat of the International Strategy for Disaster
Reduction (ISDR) today stressed the
importance of having life-saving early warning systems and preparedness
programmes in place when cyclones strike.
Salvano
Briceño noted that many cyclone-prone countries, such as Cuba, Japan, and
Bangladesh, have implemented efficient early warning systems that have reduced
the death toll caused by cyclones. “When there are comprehensive early
warning systems in place, starting from meteorological technology all the way
through to preparedness and contingency plans, people can be effectively
warned and have time to evacuate to safer places.” Bangladesh has a 48-hour
early warning system in place that allows people to evacuate to safe cyclone
shelters hours before any cyclone makes landfall. This has drastically reduced
their death tolls from cyclones – from 300,000 deaths from Cyclone Bhola in
1970, to 3,000 last November during Cyclone Sidr. “These measures are proven
lifesavers,” said Mr. Briceño.
Labels:
United
Nations, U.N., Myanmar,
Burma, cyclone,
cyclones, CERF,
Central
Emergency Response Fund, Cyclone
Nargis
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