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The Burmese military Government has been accused of unleashing “crimes against humanity” on its people by keeping is borders closed to foreign disaster relief experts.
The enraged outburst by Pierre Fouillant, of the French aid group Comité de Secours Internationaux, came as aid workers on the ground in Burma described a refugee crisis now threatening to descend into a nightmare of disease, starvation and looting.
“They say they will call, but it's always wait, wait, wait,” said Mr Fouillant, a veteran of humanitarian crises across the globe, “It's a crime against humanity. It should be against the law. It's like they are taking a gun and shooting their own people.”
Burma’s state television channel increased the death toll to 31,938 today, although the United Nations estimates that more than 100,000 people are likely to have been killed.
Mr Fouillant was among hundreds of foreign aid workers who spent an eighth day of mounting disappointment and fury waiting in vain for entry visas outside the gates of the Burmese Embassy in Bangkok.
“The Burmese Government has to understand that this crisis is too big for it to handle alone,” said Chris Webster, of the aid organisation WorldVision, after another day in which his visa application was ignored. “No government on earth can single-handedly deal with a crisis on this scale.”
The attack came as UN Secretary-General Ban Ki Moon and British Prime Minister Gordon Brown increased diplomatic pressure on Burma’s junta demanding aid agencies be given full access.
Mr Brown said the authorities’ failure to co-operate with an international relief effort was “completely unacceptable” and pledged that Britain would use its chairmanship of the UN Security Council to press for action within the next 24 hours.
“We now estimate that two million people face famine or disease as a result of the lack of co-operation of the Burmese authorities," he said.Mr Brown said that the Royal Navy ship HMS Westminster was heading for Burma to help humanitarian operations in region.
A first British aid flight was also given the green light to leave for Burma tonight, with four further planes on stand-by.
The aircraft, heading to Burma’s largest city Rangoon, was carrying plastic sheets to provide shelter for the thousands of families left homeless by the cyclone.
Mr Ban, head of the UN, said it was “critical” for Burma to accelerate the process for receiving and distributing aid for those affected by last week’s cyclone.
“Unless more aid gets into the country very quickly, we face an outbreak of infectious diseases that could dwarf today’s current crisis,” he said.
WorldVision is eager to set up “child protection spaces” in Burma offering a secure environment for children who have suffered the trauma of the cyclone or the loss of parents. If such places were made available in the immediate aftermath of a disaster, said Mr Webster, child victims might make a full psychological recovery.
Several non-governmental organisations and aid groups said that faced with the unprecedented blockade on their assistance they were now “dramatically” reviewing their traditional approach to disasters: some are exploring schemes to fly Burmese nationals out of their country, give them crash-course emergency training in Thailand and send them back to administer whatever supplies are airlifted in.
Although they would not have time to be trained in logistics or as food and sanitation experts, a 24-hour training course would give them enough skill to at least administer the successful arrival and dispatch of an airlift.
A tiny few foreign aid workers have been granted the right to use their expertise in the appalling aftermath of Cyclone Nargis, but everyone else has been thwarted by the stonewall tactics of the Burmese junta.
Aid group members marshalled in Thailand and yearning to be allowed into Burma to help the 1.5 million people affected by the storm, said that they were now working “in the hope of a green light, but on the assumption it stays red”.
The Thai Foreign Minister, Noppadon Pattama, said that his country would offer to act as a mediator between Burma and the international aid community, adding that as a major food producer and neighbour Thailand had “the burden of proximity but not the luxury of distance”.
Mr Noppadon is planning to fly to Burma himself tomorrow, but he too has not yet been issued with an entry visa.
The worst aspect of what the Burmese regime is doing, aid groups told The Times, is that the blockade is effectively one on knowledge and training, rather than the desperately needed relief supplies themselves.
Although the flow of aid has been an entirely inadequate fraction of what the United Nations says is necessary, there is a small glimmer of hope that the regime may be softening its stance. A Thai government spokesman said that Burma had now opened the Thilawa Port in Rangoon so that international vessels could unload construction equipment and materials.
The first airlift of aid by the United States military has also now departed from Thailand, and is expected to be followed by two more in the course of tomorrow. The planes contained shipments of blankets, water and mosquito nets. US and UK-based aid agencies said that a small convoy of trucks had also left Rangoon this afternoon carrying clothes, water and food supplies.
Washington condemned Burma as an “outpost of tyranny”, with Henrietta Fore, the administrator of the US Agency for International Development adding: “This is Burma's hour of need and the need is urgent.”
Waiting to help
On Thursday four UN planes carried 40 tonnes of high-energy biscuits, and a Red Cross plane ferried six tonnes of shelter materials. On Saturday the UN delivered another 22 tonnes of emergency supplies
By Friday the US had four planes and 23 helicopters ready in Thailand. One was allowed to drop aid yesterday and two were planned for today
The US Navy plans to have three ships in international waters off the Burmese coast today. It has 4,000 Marines on standby in Thailand
Two Indian Navy vessels docked in Rangoon last week
Despite a meeting in Burma, none of the UN's “critical” relief staff waiting in Bangkok had received visas yesterday
France is sending a warship with 1,500 tonnes of rice. It is expected to reach Burma this week
Gordon Brown announced yesterday that a Navy ship would be sent to the region
An airlift by the UN High Commissioner for Refugees of 100 tonnes of shelter supplies is due to arrive in the next few days
Source: Times archives
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rudy, london,
Rudy you said it. If only they (Myanmar) had oil you (British) (and the Americans) could invade and help these people (Myanmarese)
Why must it always be an allied invasion?
No oil - No help? Is that your mentality? Where is the humanity?
Poor Burmese help is far away. In Asia
Lim, Johor Bahru, Malaysia
and after katrina was what? when the people did not get help. i could not hear any talk of genocide then. But it is not genocide when USA do it, only those others. hypocrits
Tim Tyke, Barnsley, UK
if only they had oil we (and the americans) could invade and help these people.
rudy, london,
Jaroslaw F., New York, USA
How forgetful are you. Did you forget your claim that the Iraqi would line the street to welcome the American army? Why r u stuck there?
It is wiser that the Myanmar issue be tackled by Asian and Asean countries. You do not want to be sucked in Myanmar too.
Lim, Johor Bahru, Malaysia
4,000 marines waiting in Thailand. US, French and British warships are waiting nearby, so what they are waiting for!? This is the best time to invade and finish oppression. In such desperate situation the Western military coalition would have massive support of local people starving 40 years. Go!
Jaroslaw F., New York, USA
Words, words, words - have you noticed all the usual superlatives; strongly condemn, unnacceptable etc etc. This goes on without anything really happening until its too late, just like Cambodia, Ruwanda & Dafur. Unfortunately words don't save lives.
Than Shwe should be referred to as Pol Pot II.
Paul, Stockholm,
P. Smith:
I don't think most of the Burmese are allowed to have an opinion on Myanmar vis a vis Burma. Of if they did, the junta probably has already had them arrested.
Michael, Washington,
The situation will only last until the junta suddenly realises that the high death toll in the delta doesn't mean a shortage for just this year. If the UN figures are correct (and they're probably nearere the mark), there will be no-one to plant and tend the crop next year.
KR, Stockport,
Most Myanmar people prefer the name MYANMAR as it is inclusive. Burma is associated with the Bamar ethnic group and with British colonialism.
P. Smith, Kuwait
P. Smith, Mishref, Kuwait
What they are doing is nothing but GENOCIDE. Getting rid of the poorer so the rich have what they want. Just let mature do their dirty work.
Dave H, CAIRNS, AUSTRALIA
Why not just accept they do not need us there
They do not need us, and have no need to co exist with us
The charities have had a bonanza of new money being given in support.
Keep the money or offer it to China to there earth quake victims
what about the victims of forest fires in Florida
Nicholas Iles, Oswestry, Shropshire
I am so pleased that The Times continues to call Burma just that, rather than Myanmar. When did the ridiculous fashion of using foreign names for countries start?
Paulus, London , UK
No one will do anything. The region's strategic stakes are too high. China needs the junta to safeguard the planned oil pipeline that bypasses the Malacca Strait. If the US invaded Myanmar, it could trigger a strong response from China. Any resulting military action would also draw India into it.
Mezurak, Virginia, USA
Burmese Junta should be taught a lesson to live and coexist with outside world, but the most important issue at hand is to ensure the flow of aid to the Cyclone victims before the catastrophe runs out of control. At this moment, any action to break the juntas backbone is justifiable.
J. Mathew, London,
They have done it in 8.8.88, THE DAY that Burmese people will never forget!!! Now, the junta had done it again. They dont care about people. They will sell the country out to make their fortune to have 5 wives and 7 mansions plus all the nice cars in the world. They dont care what others think!
Michael Cold, Anaheim, usa
The generals see this as a chance for foreign intervention in the country which they see as theirs and not their peoples and so they refuse aid.
What they must do is realise that no reigime of any type, can survive if it is faced with opposition from the people.That and the obvious ethical reasons.
John Taylor, Durham, England
>If the Junta gets in the way "take care of them". It would be easy to call it legal.<
Sadly, this is why Burma don't want outside help - the US and Britain have long displayed contempt for international justice. If the US had ratified the International Criminal Court, we might have a solution...
Ken McCormack, Sydney, Australia
why exactly is burma not letting aid in? i dont get it for dust.
tony, leeds,
The US, France, England and other countries should go in and take care of the people. If the Junta gets in the way "take care of them". It would be easy to call it legal. Rescue Suu Kyi first and ask her if she wants us to take care of her countrymen. She is the rightful ruler of Burma.
Earl Barnett, Huntingdon, USA
I wish they would just open the borders. Someone needs to just fly over and drop food and water so the people can survive. Its irresponsible and criminal to allow these survivers to die now, not after they have lost so much.
Kristen H., Omaha, USA
What the Burmese Generals are waiting for is to line their pockets, when will people realise that these cronies are humanitarian criminals, the UN needs to issue arrest warrants for these Generals, seize and freeze assets of all the Burmese generals worldwide!
Kevin Bud, Canberra, Australia
the situation in burma has really rattled my cage, sod the politics, i think the UN should force the burmese goverment to except aid from the outside world, how many more people are going to starve to death, everyone has the right to LIVE. it's madness, i'ts genocide.
mr g baker, brighton, UK