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UN to resume aid to Myanmar

Myanmar junta warned country on verge of catastrophe

GENEVA — Myanmar's military leaders seized aid shipments headed for cyclone survivors and told the top U.S. diplomat there today that they're not ready to let in foreign aid workers despite warnings the country is on the verge of a medical catastrophe.

Another 10 centimetres of rain was forecast to fall next week as more than one million people waited for food, clean water, shelter and medicine to reach them. Diplomats and aid groups warned number of dead could eventually exceed 100,000 because of illnesses and said thousands of children may have been orphaned.

The UN World Food Program said two planeloads of supplies containing enough high-energy biscuits to feed 95,000 people were seized Friday, prompting the world body to say it was suspending food-aid flights.

Later, chief spokeswoman Nancy Roman of the World Food Program, said flights would resume on Saturday while negotiations continued for the release of the supplies.

Myanmar's government acknowledged taking control of the shipments and said it plans to distribute the aid itself to the affected areas.

In a statement e-mailed to The Associated Press, government spokesman Ye Htut said the junta had clearly stated what it would do and denied the action amounted to a seizure.

"I would like to know which person or organization (made these) these baseless accusations," he said.

The World Food Program's regional director, Tony Banbury, directly appealed to Myanmar's military leaders in an interview with Associated Press Television News.

"Please, this food is going to people who need it very much. You and I, we have the same interests," Banbury said. "Those victims — those one million or more people — who need this assistance are not part of a political dialogue. They need this humanitarian assistance. Please release it."

Shari Villarosa, the U.S. charge d'affairs in Yangon, said she met with Myanmar Deputy Foreign Minister Kyaw Thu on Friday to discuss American relief operations.

Myanmar says it will accept aid from all countries, but prohibits the entry of foreign workers who would deliver and manage the operations. The junta is "not ready" to change that position, Villarosa said she was told.

The U.S. has an enormous ability to deliver aid quickly, evident during the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami that killed 230,000 people in a dozen nations.

In Ottawa, the House of Commons unanimously adopted a resolution Friday urging Myanmar's regime to accept international relief teams. The Canadian government acknowledged how hard it is to deal with the "very difficult regime" and said it will do all it can to help the storm victims.

More than 60,000 people are dead or missing and entire villages are submerged in the Irrawaddy delta after Saturday's cyclone. Many of the survivors waiting for food, clean water and medicine were crammed into Buddhist monasteries or camped outdoors.

The UN estimates 1.5 million people have been severely affected and has voiced concern about the disposal of dead bodies.

"Many are not buried and lie in the water. They have started rotting and the stench is beyond words," Anders Ladekarl, head of the Danish Red Cross.

About 20,000 body bags were being sent so volunteers from the Myanmar chapter of the Red Cross can start collecting bodies, he said.

The UN's World Meteorological Organization said its models forecast three days of strong rain that could dump 10 centimetres in Myanmar beginning Thursday or Friday.

Heavy rain could worsen the situation in the storm-affected coastal region, the meteorological agency said, though it cautioned that forecasts beyond five days could change.

In the village of Kongyangon, someone had written in Burmese, "We are all in trouble. Please come help us" on black asphalt, a video from the Norway-based opposition news network, the Democratic Voice of Burma, showed.

A short distance away was another plea: "We're hungry."

In Yangon, the price of increasingly scarce water has shot up by more than 500 percent, and rice and oil jumped by 60 percent over the last three days, the Danish Red Cross said.

The UN has grown increasingly critical of Myanmar's refusal to let in foreign aid workers who could assess the extent of the disaster with the junta apparently overwhelmed. None of the 10 visa applications submitted by the World Food Program has been approved.

"The frustration caused by what appears to be a paperwork delay is unprecedented in modern humanitarian relief efforts," Risley said. "It's astonishing."

The junta said in a statement Friday it was grateful to the international community for its assistance — which has included 11 chartered planes loaded with aid supplies — but the best way to help was just to send in material rather than personnel.

Andrew Brookes, an aerospace specialist at the IISS, an independent think tank, said Myanmar has about 15 transport planes but most are small jets not adequate to carry hundreds of tonnes of supplies. The country has fewer than 40 helicopters and only a fraction may be operational, he said.

"Even if they were all serviceable it's not even a drop in the ocean. The task is so awesome it would phase even a sophisticated force like the British, French or Germans," Brookes said.

It is not clear how much of aid has been delivered to the victims in the Irrawaddy delta.

"Believe me, the government will not allow outsiders to go into the devastated area," said Yangon food shop owner Joseph Kyaw.

"The government only cares about its own stability. They don't care about the plight of the people," he said.

Three Red Cross aid flights loaded with shelter kits and other emergency supplies landed in Myanmar Friday without incident.

"We are not experiencing any problems getting in (unlike) the United Nations," Danish Red Cross spokesman Hans Beck Gregersen said.

One relief flight was sent back after landing in Yangon on Thursday because it carried a search-and-rescue team and media representatives who had not received permission to enter the country, the junta said. It did not give details, but said the plane had flown in from Qatar.

According to state media, 23,335 people died and 37,019 are missing from Cyclone Nargis. Villarosa, head of the United States Embassy in Yangon, said the number of dead could eventually exceed 100,000 because of illnesses.

Grim assessments were made about what lies ahead. The aid group Action Against Hunger noted that the delta region is known as the country's granary, and the cyclone hit before the harvest.

"If the harvest has been destroyed this will have a devastating impact on food security in Myanmar," the group said.

The Canadian government has offered to send its military Disaster Assistance Response Team to the storm-ravaged country and has also pledged $2 million for relief efforts.

The Associated Press

The Associated Press

The Associated Press / With files from The Canadian Press

Myanmar’s military rulers view all foreigners with suspion

BANGKOK, Thailand — In the eyes of Myanmar's military leaders, everyone is a potential enemy. Even foreign aid workers.

As the international community waits to deliver desperately needed aid to Myanmar's cyclone survivors, it is getting a lesson in the mind-set of the country's military rulers: reclusive, xenophobic generals whose junta has held power for almost half a century.

A week after cyclone Nargis slammed into Myanmar's western coast, killing tens of thousands and leaving an estimated one million people homeless, the impoverished country's needs remain enormous. After initially pleading for urgent help, the junta now seems in no rush to welcome it.

"The military regime is extraordinarily xenophobic. They are afraid of everything," said Sean Turnell, a Myanmar expert at Australia's Macquarie University.

Among the junta's fears are internal uprisings, a U.S. invasion and globalization and its capacity to dilute traditional Burmese culture. In the aftermath of Saturday's cyclone, the junta also appears to be afraid of losing face with its people.

"If they can't handle the situation and they let westerners come in with helicopters, this will demonstrate to their own people the shortcomings of the military," Turnell said. "They are more concerned with control and maintaining an omniscience in front of their people than saving lives."

Myanmar's Foreign Ministry said in a statement Friday that it wants relief supplies but not foreign aid workers in the country.

The government "is not yet ready" to receive foreign rescue workers or journalists and was capable of delivering emergency aid "with its own labour to the affected areas," it said.

After days of stalling, the junta gave clearance Thursday for the first major international airlifts carrying aid to cyclone survivors. But it continued to withhold visas for several UN teams seeking entry, said Richard Horsey, a UN spokesman in neighbouring Thailand.

A foreign military's presence in Myanmar — especially allowing in U.S. forces with their high airlift capacity — would mark a major concession by the junta.

"They're afraid that if foreign soldiers come in they are the spearhead to overthrow the government," said Josef Silverstein, a retired Rutgers University professor who studied Myanmar for more than a half century.

From the junta's perspective: "Aid workers could be carrying weapons to give to the people, they could give them ideas of how to overthrow the government."

Aid agencies say efforts to rush relief supplies to large-scale disasters are often slowed by red tape, but Myanmar's foot dragging has a deeper, historical context.

The junta has long mistrusted the West because of more than a century of British colonial rule that ended in 1948. A parliamentary democracy survived until dictator Gen. Ne Win seized power in a 1962 coup.

During his 26-year rule, Ne Win's regime curtailed human rights and political opposition and closed the country to outsiders, earning Burma, as it was then known, the nickname "Asia's hermit."

Tourists were, for the most part, not allowed in until the 1970s when visitors were given strict, seven-day visas.

These days tourists get one-month visas but journalists are welcome only during carefully scripted occasions, such as the annual celebration of Armed Forces Day to commemorate the military's might.

Over the years, ruling juntas have imposed a variety of laws designed to keep Burmese culture strong and block the influence of the outside world: It is illegal for locals to hold foreign currency and to host foreigners in their homes overnight. Foreign diplomats are required to seek government permission to travel outside Yangon, the commercial capital.

The junta despises detained opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi, partly because of her connection to the West. Suu Kyi spent time living in Britain and was married to a British man, which the junta says makes her a traitor, even though her father, Gen. Aung San, is a national hero who founded the army and led the fight for independence from Britain.

One of the junta's main foes is the United States, which has imposed economic sanctions against the generals and is a strident critic of Myanmar's human rights record. Washington is a regular target of contempt in Myanmar's state-controlled media.

The U.S. invasions of Iraq in 1991 and in 2003 only added to the junta's mistrust. Some analysts believe the junta's abrupt decision in 2005 to relocate the country's capital from Yangon to the remote city of Naypyitaw, which it carved out of dense jungle, was driven by fears of a U.S. invasion.

Earlier this week, President George W. Bush said his message to military rulers was: "Let the United States come help you."

His wife, first lady Laura Bush, described the junta as "very inept" on several fronts and accused Myanmar's leaders of failing to give citizens lifesaving warnings about the cyclone.

That kind of language is not helpful, said Monique Skidmore, a Myanmar expert at Australian National University.

"It's actually making it a lot more difficult for the U.S. agencies because Bush must be enraging the generals," said Skidmore. "That's not the thing to be doing if he wants to get aid there as quickly as possible."

The Associated Press

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    1. TEAM STILL AWAITING VISAS

      TORONTO — A member of a Toronto-based rapid response team says he is frustrated the team has been unable to secure visas to get into cyclone-ravaged Myanmar — and the UN's decision today to suspend aid shipments will affect his group's backup plan.

      Rahul Singh with GlobalMedic told The Canadian Press in an interview from Bangkok this morning that it is a frustrating time right now.

      Singh says the embassy for Myanmar is closed today for a public holiday in Thailand and he is still hopeful the team will be able to get visas on Monday — even though Myanmar's government has said it doesn't want foreign aid workers entering the country.

      GlobalMedic's rapid response team, which left from Toronto on Wednesday, was equipped with five million water purification tablets, 21 water purification units and $1 million worth of medicine to stave off water-borne diseases.

      Singh says the team plans to train aid workers from Myanmar on how to use the water purification equipment in Bangkok and start sending it in with them to Myanmar this weekend, so at least the equipment can still be used to produce clean water.

      But he says the UN's decision to suspend aid shipments to Myanmar means the air bridge will be shut down so GlobalMedic will have to get the equipment across the border a little at a time instead of all at once by air.

      The Canadian Press

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