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07.05.2008 - Fears Burma storm toll could soar

Five days Czechs earmark another 2.5 million crowns in support of Burma ...
Another Czech charity collecting money for Burma ...
Burma 'must allow aid workers in' ...
Cyclone kills 4 in Burma, disaster declared ...
Bush tightens Burma sanctions ...
India and Burma in transport deal ...
after a devastating cyclone struck, the UN has urged Burma to open its doors to foreign aid and staff.

More than 22,000 people were killed, says the government, but the top US diplomat in Burma warned that without speedy action that could top 100,000.

The Czech Republic news are represented by www.praguetravelguide.info


Amid the "increasingly horrendous" situation, there is a "real risk" of disease outbreak, said the head of the US embassy in Burma, Shari Villarosa.
Some aid has arrived but the UN says big obstacles remain for aid agencies.
Burma's ruling military junta has approved the passage of some aid, but other offers have been spurned while many foreign aid workers are being held in a queue for visas.
In the area worst affected by Saturday's cyclone, the vast Irrawaddy delta, survivors have walked for days past dead bodies to find help.
They are hungry, thirsty and vulnerable to disease - but roads are blocked and aid has been slow to arrive.

Disease risk
The last Burmese death toll, on Tuesday, said 22,464 people had now been confirmed dead and another 41,054 people were missing as a result of high winds and the tidal surge.

Up to a million people are thought to have been left homeless in the crisis, which has left thousands of square kilometres of the Irrawaddy delta under water.
Shari Villarosa, the charge d'affaires of the US embassy in Burma - also known as Myanmar - said food and water were running short in the delta area and called the situation there "increasingly horrendous."
"There is a very real risk of disease outbreaks as long as this continues," Ms Villarosa said, according to Associated Press.
The death toll could reach or exceed 100,000 as humanitarian conditions worsen, she said - based on information from a non-governmental organisation that she would not name.

Accounts from the Irrawaddy delta have spoken of fistfights breaking out between survivors desperate to seize dwindling supplies of food and water.
Some are breaking open coconuts for the water inside, while others are driven to eating dead fish.
Poor sanitation, rotting bodies in the water, and flooding could all bring disease, aid agencies warn.
They highlight the risk of mosquito-borne malaria and dengue fever, along with water-borne diseases such as cholera and dysentery.
Calls for access
The Burmese authorities have attracted criticism over claims they are refusing to provide visas to waiting foreign aid workers and have spurned some offers of help, such as a US offer to deploy three naval ships and two planes in the region.
The US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is the latest to voice such criticism, telling reporters:
"What remains is for the Burmese government to allow the international community to help its people. It should be a simple matter. It is not a matter of politics."
Earlier, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon urged authorities in Burma to assist the entry of foreign aid workers and supplies into the country "in every way possible" - strong diplomatic language, says the BBC's correspondent at the UN, Laura Trevelyan.
Speaking to reporters, the UN's humanitarian chief John Holmes accepted that aid agencies had faced difficulties accessing the disaster zone.
Aid arrives
But, he said, co-operation from the Burmese authorities was "reasonable and heading in the right direction".

He dismissed a suggestion by the French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner that the UN Security Council should adopt a resolution allowing aid to be flown into the country by force as unnecessarily confrontational.
Mr Holmes said 24 countries had pledged assistance so far worth $30m (Ј15m), and a flash appeal would be launched on Friday once an initial assessment of need was complete.
An assessment team was due in Burma on Thursday.
A stream of aid is now in, or on its way, to Burma:
  • The UN says a plane loaded with 25 tonnes of supplies and a small team of rescue staff will arrive in Burma within days
  • The UN's World Food Programme has dispatched an additional four planes loaded with supplies including high-energy biscuits
  • Chinese media say a plane carrying 60 tonnes of aid has landed in the biggest city, Rangoon
  • Planes from Thailand, India and Indonesia are also being dispatched
  • The WFP has already begun to distribute existing food aid stocks in and around Rangoon, and the Red Cross has a handful of expatriate and many local staff on the ground.




Are you in Burma, or do you have friends and family there? Have you - or they - been affected by the cyclone? Send your comments and pictures using the post form below.
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(BBC)


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