Burma - cyclone - military junta - referendum
UN: 220,000 reported missing in Burma
Sunday 11 May 2008
The UN says some 220,000 people have gone missing in the devastation following the passage of cyclone Nargis, while many now face health risks. FRANCE 24's Anaïs Boussat reports from Rangoon. (Report: B. Harris)
Special Report Crackdown on Burmese protestsSunday 11 May 2008
By ReutersThe number of people reported missing in the Myanmar cyclone was about 220,000, the United Nations humanitarian agency said on Sunday, warning of environmental damage, violence and mass migration.
It said assessments of 55 townships in the Irrawaddy deltaand other disaster areas found up to 102,000 people could have been killed in Cyclone Nargis, which struck flimsy dwellings with fierce winds and waves on the night of May 2.
"Based on these assessments, the U.N. estimates that 1,215,885 to 1,919,485 million people have been affected by the cyclone, the number of deaths could range from 63,290 to 101,682, and 220,000 people are reported to be missing," the report by the United Nations Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said.
Myanmar state-run TV reported on Sunday night that the death toll had risen to more than 28,458 and 33,416 people were missing.
The cyclone had "likely resulted in acute environmental issues that could pose an immediate risk to human life and health", the U.N. report said.
It said migration and violence were also emerging as problems in the poor southeast Asian country, where a succession of military juntas have ruled with an iron grip for 46 years.
"Given the gravity of the situation including the lack of food and water, some partners have reported fears for security, and violent behaviour in the most severely afflicted areas," the report said.
"Some assessments have suggested that people are coping by migrating outwards from the most affected to less affected areas in search of the basic necessities."
The U.N. agency also said few visas have been issued for disaster relief workers to enter the country.
The reclusive military government, while accepting aid from all over the world, has been reluctant to allow in western aid experts, many of whom have been waiting in Bangkok and other cities for days.
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IN THE FIELD
'Some people were happy not to vote because they didn't want to have to vote yes,' Anais Boussat in Rangoon, 11/05, 7am (GMT+2)
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