Kenneth Denby in Rangoon
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Two and a half million people have been made homeless or destitute by Cyclone Nargis, but for one of the tiniest of them, a two-month-old infant named Kyaw Zin Law, Thursday might have been the day that gave him a glimmer of hope. I had met the baby boy and his mother nine days ago and at the time it was hard to believe that he would live out the week. His limbs were emaciated and he barely had the energy to cry.
But Kyaw Zin Law is tougher than he looks. He survived the wind that blew away his house and the flood that drowned his neighbours. He has clung on for two weeks in a ruined monastery where hundreds of refugees sleep head to toe. His weight has dropped and his temperature has soared, but on Thursday morning he finally saw a doctor. She diagnosed severe pneumonia and malnutrition and referred him to a hospital for tests and treatment. One thing stands between Kyaw Zin Law and the treatment that would save his life: money.
Having lost their home his parents have nothing but the clothes they wear and the small amount of rice that kindly local people give them. They are simple people and the prospect of going to the hospital, finding a doctor and purchasing drugs is beyond their experience and finances.
“I came away feeling so pessimistic,” said the Burmese friend who visited Kyaw Zin Law and his family this week. “The doctor who saw the boy did her best, but she was not a specialist. She had only simple drugs such as paracetamol and there was nothing she could do for him. The laboratory tests could easily cost 60,000 kyat [£25].”.
This is the reality of life in the Irrawaddy delta after Cyclone Nargis. It is not true to say that no help is getting through, for some is – such as the Burmese government doctor who briefly examined Kyaw Zin Law. But it is so inadequate as to generate as much frustration as relief. Two weeks after the worst natural disaster in its modern history the Burmese Government is like a doctor applying a sticking plaster to a severed limb. State television yesterday put the latest figures at 77,738 dead and 55,917 missing.
It was impossible for me to visit Kyaw Zin Law in person; instead a Burmese friend made the three-hour journey from the old capital, Rangoon, to the monastery in the town of Pyapon where the little boy and his family shelter. The photographs he took show that much has changed since I made the journey a week earlier, little of it for the better.
It is not only the roadblocks designed to keep out legitimate foreign aid workers, as well as clandestinely operating journalists. People living in the towns along the road have improvised repairs to those houses that remain standing, to keep out the monsoon rains. But they are under increasing pressure from an incoming population from villages where the cyclone did its worst.
They stand in their thousands all along the road, in an orderly line that in places is several people deep – men, women and children, some of them unaccompanied by parents or friends. When an aid truck stops – one provided by the Government or by the many Burmese private benefactors who are converging on the delta – they form anxious queues until the limited supplies quickly and inevitably run out.
My Burmese friend was told by local people that in one riverside town, Dalat, refugees were invited into a smart group of tents before the arrival of General Hla Htay Win, military commander of the Rangoon division. After the general had carried out his inspection of the spick and span camp, posed for photographs and buzzed off in his helicopter, the refugees were turned out on to the road again.
In the absence of independent foreign observers, nasty rumours are circulating. Refugees are said to be pressganged into breaking stones for road building for 1,000 kyat a day, and to have been forcibly relocated far away from their villages.
There are repeated reports that foreign aid has been sold off for profit in markets, although no one has produced a verifiable example of this. Hakan Tongul, of the UN World Food Programme, told The Times in Rangoon yesterday that his staff had found the organisation’s own high-energy biscuits on sale in markets in the city – but that these might simply have been sold on in small numbers by refugees who had received them legitimately, rather than in bulk by corrupt members of the Government.
The World Health Organisation confirmed yesterday that cases of cholera have been found in the delta, but emphasised that the disease is endemic in Burma and that the present small number of cases does not exceed normal levels for this time of year. But cholera can spread quickly in refugee camp conditions and the deadly consequences of an epidemic are obvious to everyone.
The whole region endures in the same situation as Kyaw Zin Law: lamentably neglected, vulnerable, but just surviving from day to day, thanks to no one and nothing but his own will to live.
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Any updates on Kyaw Zin Law?
Help Myanmar, Chiang Mai, Thailand
Megan , Flushing, USA
Yes, Mr. Megan v hear u loud and clear. People should be talking care and love, peace and progress, understanding and harmony.
Hope there are more people like you. The world will be a better place.
Lim, Johor Bahru, Malaysia
Can all the people in this world be more loving and caring for each others, stop using your religion as a shield to scare people, no one should fear anyone, it is the Creator of this universe and his son Jesus that everyone should fear, so ask God to forgive your sin from harming others, be kind pls
Megan , Flushing, USA
John scott, Leeds, UK
Malaysia is only one of d Asean countries. Asean aid relief workers are in Myanmar. The Thai premier was there recently. Asians do things d subtle & peaceful way. Things with Myanmar will change.
Oh yes, u will say it is propaganda d leaders seen handling out aid on TV
Lim, Johor Bahru, Malaysia
I hate critics who called for military intervention. That is not the way to help the suffering. If you are seriously concerned, why not flood Myanmar with your aid. Surely the junta will not be able to self consume all (as had been alleged) and will have to distribute some to the victims.
Lim, Johor Bahru, Malaysia
(2) Have the west considered whether the junta has the logistics to deliver aid to such a wide area. Your aid will be quite useless if there is difficulties delivering. Why not include in your aid program, some light boats, vehicles & others and see whether the junta will deliver.
Peace not war. OK
Lim, Johor Bahru, Malaysia
America is called on to take care of the whole world, but once
we do , we are criticized by even our our own country. What would the WORLD do if for once we decided to think only of ourselves? I don't want to do that and fortunately for the rest of the world, most Americans don't.
S Rich, OKC, USA
Where are leaders of the past who had firstly humanity & secondly 'guts' to override idiotic ditherers.
A good leader would have over flown & dropping aid food,tents,water.
Sod the Junta, a bunch of crooks, why are western 'leaders ' [?] sitting around using the excuse of 'negotiations'.
It's tragic
maggie millington, brittany, france
Lim - no foreign interference, ASEAN yes. Excuse me, but that is a ridiculous statement - an oxymoron too. I am sure Aung San Suu Kyi's realises that foreign intervention is now needed, rather than typical ASEAN dithering. Maybe Mbeki can be a consultant to ASEAN when he steps down shortly : )
Tony , Jakarta, Indonesia
Lim - John from Leeds is correct. ASEAN diplomacy has achieved nothing. The junta took power almost 50 years ago - since then they have reduced Burma to a basket case or worse - whilst enriching themselves. The American Vietnam war was a mistake, as Ho C Minh was governing responsibly and humanely.
Tony , Jakarta, Indonesia
desperately sad about what has happened in Burma, it is all the sadder because Aid is not being allowed in, as it is in China. Why can't the Junta Government, realise that their children are the future of Burma, and allow Aid to get in.
elsie whyte, bangor, Down
I'll pay the $55 for it
Dave, UK, UK
The World Court should intervene and force the dictator(s) of Burma to accept both aid in the form of food and medicine plus physical assistance of specialists from other countries. They are committing murder on a grand scale and the world should not let them get away with it.
A. Ansell, Orillia, ON, Canada
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