No Comments

Burma’s Cyclone Death Toll Is Staggering

Current World News Comments (0)

By Bridget Johnson, your guide to Journalism


And further hampered by a few points:

  • The unwillingness of the military junta to ask “enemies” for help

  • The abject poverty created by the junta’s leadership, as well as general distrust of the people for the regime due to years of brutal rule

  • The continued denial of visas to foreign media. According to Burmese media in exile, the death toll cited by the government — 22,000, as of this writing — is being knocked down by many pegs.


The regime is also saying currently that up to 41,000 people are missing.


The latest updates:

  • Burma’s opposition, the National League for Democracy, called plans by the junta to go ahead with a constitutional referendum on Saturday (with a two-week buffer for those areas hardest hit by the cyclone) “unacceptable,” and criticized the government for not aiding storm victims four days after the disaster.

  • The U.S. has offered $3.25 million, and has ships standing by off Thailand waiting to help try to find survivors and provide humanitarian relief, but the junta seems loathe to admit America or other aid agencies.

  • The European Union donated two million euros amid concerns that it would actually get to the people who need it most.

  • Even U.N. aid workers have had their visas delayed by the junta.


Meanwhile, as CNN reports after getting a correspondent into the country, survivors are getting desperate and chucking bodies — those that aren’t pinned under trees — into rivers.

Read more

admin @ May 7, 2008

Leave a comment

XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>