Aid groups seek clearance from Myanmar junta to access cyclone-hit state
Tana Forum on Security in Africa
RELIEF organisations on Wednesday said they were awaiting clearance from Myanmar’s military rulers to access areas of Rakhine State to deliver food and medicine to communities in urgent need.
Rakhine state was hit by Cyclone Mocha on Sunday, where hundreds of people are estimated to have been killed in the impoverished region.
The cyclone tore down houses, communication towers, and bridges with winds of up to 210 kph (130 mph) and triggered a storm surge that inundated the state capital Sittwe.
Residents contacted by Reuters said no help had arrived even days after the storm and volunteers were digging through debris to search for the missing.
One resident who declined to be identified for safety reasons said about 400 people had died and more were at risk of dying “for not having food, purified water, and emergency treatment.
There are no search and rescue teams either.
Rakhine State, with a population of more than three million, is particularly vulnerable and is home to the persecuted Rohingya Muslim minority that successive governments in predominantly Buddhist Myanmar have refused to recognise.
Some 600,000 Rohingya still live in the state, while more than a million live in sprawling camps in neighbouring Bangladesh, having fled military crackdowns in recent years.
Some still embark on perilous boat journeys to Malaysia and Indonesia.
United Nations agencies said they were still awaiting a green light from authorities to assess and distribute supplies in affected areas, some of which were inaccessible due to extensive damage.
Pierre Peron, a spokesperson for the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said, “We have established communications channels with all authorities in Myanmar.
“We have asked for unrestricted access to affected communities.’’
The U.N. Development Programme, the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF), and the UN refugee agency UNHCR also said their requests were pending approval.
UNHCR spokesperson Reuben Lim Wende said, “it is important for humanitarian actors to ascertain damage, needs and provide immediate life-saving assistance, not least as the monsoon season nears.’’
State media on Wednesday said junta leader Min Aung Hlaing had visited affected areas in Bagan, another region, and separately met with a UNHCR representative to discuss relief efforts.
It said military vessels and helicopters had transported aid to Rakhine and 21 people, including security force personnel doing rescue work, had died as a result of the storm.
A spokesperson for the junta could not be reached.
About 5.4 million people were expected to have been in the storm’s path, the majority of who were considered vulnerable. (Reuters/NAN)
T.S
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