Burma to receive $50m in aid

by cynthia yoo | May 25, 2008 at 12:39 pm | 175 views | 1 comment | 0 recommendations

Rangoon played host to a meeting of international donors who pledged about $50million in aid to victims of Cyclone Nargis.

Burma's military junta asked for $11billion but donors expressed weariness over the government's handling of the relief efforts.

Some donors said the money depended on foreign aid-workers being allowed into the Irrawaddy Delta disaster zone.

The head of the United Nations has said he hopes Burma's leaders will now face up to the scale of the problem.

"I'm cautiously optimistic that this could be a turning point for Myanmar to be more flexible, more practical, and face the reality as it is on the ground," Secretary General Ban Ki-moon told the BBC.

Burma's Prime Minister, Thein Sein, said more help would be welcome but only if it did not have political overtones.

At least 78,000 people have died as a result of the cyclone and more than 50,000 people are still missing.

The UN believes only a quarter of those needing aid - up to 2.4 million people - have received it.

The UK's International Development Secretary, Douglas Alexander, said the eyes of the world would be on the Burmese to ensure aid workers were given "full and unfettered" access.

"The humanitarian crisis in Burma is grave and urgent," he told the conference.

"I have told the Burmese ministers that I have met: 'You will be judged not by your words but by your actions' and action is what the world will be looking for in the days and weeks ahead."

A top US official, Scot Marciel, also said further US aid depended on Burma giving disaster experts access to disaster areas.

This was "established practice readily accepted by other nations", he added.

American, French and British military ships full of aid are waiting just outside Burma's waters.

The Burmese government is concerned that the foreign naval ships off its shores could somehow be used to launch an invasion, diplomats say.

Prime Minister Thein Sein said on Sunday that Burma would accept supplies by sea only if they came in on civilian boats.

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May 25, 2008 at 12:39 pm by cynthia yoo, 175 views, 1 comment

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