Wed, 9 Jul 00:34:37 GMT17

 

MSF teams delivering aid to the Delta call for immediate and unobstructed escalation of relief operations
16 May 2008 11:00:00 GMT
MSF International
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MSF calls on the Government of Myanmar to allow for an immediate scale-up of the relief effort and free and unhindered access of international humanitarian staff to the affected areas.

MSF and podcasts:  Yangon/Geneva - Fourteen days after Cyclone Nargis hit Myanmar, needs remain immense in the Irawaddy Delta. Medecins Sans Frontières (MSF) teams are delivering medical assistance and relief supplies directly to tens of thousands of people. However, MSF urges for an immediate scaling up of the overall relief operation, which until now has been deployed far too slowly and is largely insufficient.

Hundreds of thousands of people have lost their homes and many are gathered in makeshift camps. They are in urgent need of drinking water, food and other basic necessities. Elsewhere, survivors are living among the remains of their homes, surrounded by flood waters and dead bodies.

MSF already had medical projects in Myanmar before Cyclone Nargis hit. This has enabled MSF to respond immediately to the catastrophe in the Delta, bringing relief directly to the populations. Teams now work in over 20 different locations and are managing to push further into the outlying areas. They treat several hundred patients each day.

In addition to wounds, the main health problems are respiratory infections, fever and diarrhoea. So far, 140 tons of relief material were flown into the country. More than 275 tons of food has been distributed since the beginning of operations.

"Although MSF is able to provide a certain level of direct assistance, the overall relief effort is clearly inadequate," said Bruno Jochum, Director of Operations for MSF in Geneva.

"Thousands of people affected by the cyclone are in a critical state and are in urgent need of relief. The aid effort is hampered by the government-imposed restriction on international staff working in the Delta region. For example: despite the fact that some MSF water and sanitation specialists have been granted visas to enter Myanmar, they have not been permitted to travel into the disaster area, where their expertise is desperately needed.

"An effective emergency operation of this magnitude requires coordinators and technical staff experienced in large-scale emergency response."

MSF calls on the Government of Myanmar to allow for an immediate scale-up of the relief effort and free and unhindered access of international humanitarian staff to the affected areas.

MSF has worked in Myanmar since 1992. At present, 250 MSF staff are working in the Irawaddy Delta in the areas of Pyanpon, Bogaley, Haingyi, Pyinsalu, Tongwa, Labutta, Thingangon and Chaungzu.

Some 30 international staff are mostly confined to Yangon

So far, MSF has flown in four cargo planes with of emergency items including water and sanitation equipment, medical supplies, therapeutic food and other relief supplies. A fifth plane is due to arrive in Yangon on Friday, May 16.

MSF has been able to receive these goods in our warehouses in Yangon, from where they are further dispatched by MSF teams to the logistic bases in Pathein and Bogaley in the Delta. MSF chartered boats are then used for transport into the disaster area.

Only selected MSF documents are posted on Alertnet. For a complete selection of MSF news, please visit the MSF International website

[ Any views expressed in this article are those of the writer and not of Reuters. ]

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