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    Myanmar Cyclone Death Toll Soars Past 22,000
    By Henry Chu and Maggie Farley
    The Los Angeles Times

    Tuesday 06 May 2008

The isolationist Southeast Asian nation is reluctantly accepting international aid despite its military rulers' suspicion of outsiders. The regime also insists a controversial vote will be held Saturday.

    New Delhi - State media in Myanmar said today that the death toll from last weekend's cyclone had climbed past 22,000, with thousands more people missing, news agencies reported.

    A news broadcast on government-run radio said that 22,464 people have been confirmed dead in the aftermath of Tropical Cyclone Nargis, which lashed Myanmar with winds of up to 120 mph last Saturday, the Associated Press reported.

    Drinking water and other basic necessities remain scarce, with relief efforts hampered by washed-out roads and other infrastructure damage.

    The military junta that rules Myanmar also announced that in the worst-affected areas, a referendum on the nation's new constitution would be postponed by two weeks. Voting would take place as planned on Saturday in the rest of the country, however.

    A government official said that many of those who perished were killed by a tidal wave that washed away whole villages in the Irrawaddy River delta, the area hit hardest by the cyclone.

    "More deaths were caused by the tidal wave than the storm itself," Minister for Relief and Resettlement Maung Maung Swe told a news conference in the devastated former capital, Yangon, according to Reuters.

    "The wave was up to 12 feet high, and it swept away and inundated half the houses in low-lying villages," he said. "They did not have anywhere to flee."

    The new toll marked a sharp escalation from the previous official tally of 351. Earlier today, Foreign Minister Nyan Win said about 10,000 people died in a single township called Bogalay. More than 4,000 died in other areas.

    The cyclone's destruction has caused the isolated Southeast Asian nation, also known as Burma, to reluctantly accept international aid and foreign humanitarian workers to help provide food, water and shelter across the countryside, despite the military regime's deep suspicion of outsiders.

    International relief teams stood ready to answer Myanmar's appeal for help. But visas for aid workers have reportedly not yet been issued by the government, which has spurned similar offers of assistance in the past.

    First Lady Laura Bush, in a rare White House question-and-answer session, chastised Myanmar's leaders for plans to proceed with Saturday's referendum on a draft constitution. She said that the the vote would give "false legitimacy to their continued rule." Myanmar's leaders are deeply superstitious and had determined that, astrologically speaking, May 10 was the most favorable date for the plebiscite.

    The White House announced that the U.S. Embassy in Myanmar had made $250,000 in emergency funds available immediately for relief efforts, but officials weren't certain that the government would accept the offer. The aid probably would be channeled through U.N. agencies, and not delivered directly to the Myanmar government, because of U.S. sanctions on the regime.

    The updated death toll would make Tropical Cyclone Nargis the worst natural disaster in Southeast Asia since the 2004 tsunami, which claimed more than 220,000 lives. A 1991 cyclone in Bangladesh killed more than 140,000 people. Hurricane Katrina, in comparison, resulted in 1,836 deaths.

    Images on Myanmar TV showed entire villages submerged or swept away. Fallen trees blocked roads, preventing relief from getting through

    Telephone lines and Internet connections were down, making communication even more difficult in a country whose autocratic rulers keep a tight rein on contact with the outside world. Aid officials said it could be several days or even weeks before a final assessment of death and damage could be made.

    Many of the displaced residents in the mostly Buddhist nation were taking shelter in temple pagodas, said Christine South, Asia-Pacific operations coordinator for the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.

    South said by telephone from Geneva that her organization had sent five teams to survey the damage - two in the capital, Yangon (also known as Rangoon), and three in the Irrawaddy delta area.

    The aid workers were distributing about 4,200 emergency kits containing clothing, water purification tablets, tarpaulins and other necessities. The federation also had more relief teams standing by in the region, waiting for a go-ahead from the Myanmar government, South said.

    The cyclone may have wider implications for rice production in the region, which is already beset by a food crisis.

    "This is the rice bowl of Myanmar, so we have to assess the impact on food production in the longer term," South said. Myanmar had agreed to supply tens of thousands of tons of rice to Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, according to the World Food Program (WFP), but now those prospects are uncertain.

    The WFP is already struggling to provide emergency food aid as fuel and food costs spiral, and the cyclone aftermath will further strain its resources.

    In Yangon, there were reports of homes with their roofs blown off and windows shattered, and of roads blocked by fallen trees and other debris. Some power lines were down.

    "People are having problems with drinking water," said Soe Myint, a Burmese political dissident based in New Delhi, the Indian capital, citing information from contacts in Yangon. "Prices of basic commodities have increased."

    The WFP said that it had 3,800 tons of food in Myanmar when the cyclone hit, including rice, beans, and other staples. About a quarter of that has been distributed in Yangon.

    "There is a lot of damage, and that's making it difficult for the teams to get out," spokeswoman Brenda Barton said in Rome, where the agency is based.

    First Lady Bush, who has taken a special interest in Myanmar, told reporters that the administration would work with the U.N. and international nongovernmental agencies to provide water, sanitation, food and shelter and was ready to send an assistance team.

    "The government of Burma should accept this team quickly, as well as other offers of international assistance," she said.

    The disaster took on a political dimension when the first lady also said that President Bush would sign legislation today authorizing the presentation of the Congressional Gold Medal to Myanmar dissident leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

    The first lady also criticized Myanmar's government for not adequately warning citizens about the approaching storm.

    "It's troubling that many of the Burmese people learned of this impending disaster only when foreign outlets, such as Radio Free Asia and Voice of America, sounded the alarm," she said.

    Mike Green, a former National Security Council expert on Asia, said in an interview that it was unclear whether the cyclone would provide an opportunity for the United States to engage Myanmar, because "the government has been hermit-like."

    "This will be a real test case," said Green, who is a senior advisor at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington think tank, adding that any acceptance of U.S. assistance "would be significant."

    Myint said there was some criticism by residents that Myanmar's military was slow to mobilize to help citizens deal with the crisis - for example, by clearing roads in residential areas.

    Last fall, the regime was quick to send troops to quell democracy protests. Dozens of people are believed to have been killed in the bloody confrontations that ensued.

    Despite the cyclone's catastrophic effect, it appeared that the military regime remained intent on proceeding with the constitutional referendum on Saturday. But a government minister told foreign diplomats that balloting might be delayed by "a few days" in the hardest-hit areas, the Associated Press reported.

    The referendum is on a draft constitution that is supposed to the pave the way for democratic elections in 2010. The draft also reinforces the power of the military regime, giving generals the right to intervene in politics and reserving 25% of parliamentary seats for army officers, which gives them a veto over constitutional change. Exile groups have charged that the voting is rigged and that citizens have been compelled to vote in favor of the measure.

    "It is certainly a predetermined result," said Tion Kwa, an Asia Society fellow who follows Myanmar closely. " We can be pretty sure that it will pass and with a sizable majority."


    Chu reported from New Delhi and Farley from the United Nations. Times staff writer Tracy Wilkinson in Rome and James Gerstenzang in Washington contributed to this report.

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