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Myanmar cyclone deaths to top 15,000 PDF Print E-mail

Reuters

YANGON - At least 15,000 people were killed and up to 30,000 missing as
a result of a huge storm surge that accompanied a devastating cyclone in
Myanmar's Irrawaddy delta, officials said on Tuesday, warning the toll
was likely to rise as rescuers reached remote areas.

Foreign Minister Nyan Win said on state television that 10,000 people
had died in just one town, Bogalay, as he gave the first detailed
account of the worst cyclone to hit Asia since 1991, when 143,000 people
died in Bangladesh.

Thailand's foreign minister, Noppadol Pattama, said after a meeting with
Myanmar's ambassador to Bangkok that he'd been told 30,000 people were
missing following Friday's devastating storm.

"The losses have been much greater than we anticipated," Noppadol said
after ambassador Ye Win declined to speak to reporters.

The total left homeless by the 190 km per hour winds and 12 foot storm
surge is in the several hundred thousands, United Nations aid officials
say, and could run into the millions.

The scale of the disaster drew a rare acceptance of outside help from
the diplomatically isolated generals, who spurned such approaches in the
aftermath of the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami.

Bernard Delpuech, a European Union aid official in Yangon, said the
junta had sent three ships carrying food to the delta region, rice bowl
for Myanmar's 53 million people. Nearly half the population live in the
five disaster-hit states.

"MASSIVE, TERRIBLE"

Aid agency World Vision in Australia said it had been granted special
visas to send in personnel to back up 600 staff in the impoverished
Southeast Asian country.

"This is massive. It is not necessarily quite tsunami level, but in
terms of impact of millions displaced, thousands dead, it is just
terrible," World Vision Australia head Tim Costello said.

"Organisations like ours have been given permission, which is pretty
unprecedented, to fly people in. This shows how grave it is in the
Burmese government's mind," he said.

The town-by-town list of dead and missing announced by Nyan Win showed
14,859 deaths in the Irrawaddy division and 59 in Yangon, the biggest
city of five million and the former capital.

The hardest-hit area was the Irrawaddy region where about 10,000 people
died in Bogalay, 90 kms southwest of Yangon.

In Yangon people were queuing up for bottled water and there was still
no electricity four days after the vicious Cyclone Nargis struck.

"Generators are selling very well under the generals," said one man
waiting outside a shop, reflecting some of the resentment on the streets
to what many described as a slow warning and response.

Very few soldiers were seen clearing debris and trees, except at major
intersections, residents in the former capital said. Monks and
residents, using what tools they had, cut trees.

The junta has moved even further into the shadows in the last six months
due to widespread outrage at its bloody crackdown on protests led by
Buddhist monks in September.



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