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Aid offers mount for Myanmar after deadly cyclone

Tue May 6, 2008 6:30am IST
 
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By Aung Hla Tun

YANGON (Reuters) - Countries around the globe have promised help for Myanmar after a cyclone left at least 13,000 dead or missing, but how quickly aid could move into the country, tightly controlled by a military junta, was unclear on Tuesday.

The cyclone ripped through the Irrawaddy delta on Saturday, and, after an initial count of a few hundred dead, Myanmar announced much bigger figures late on Monday.

"The basic message was that they believe the provisional death toll was about 10,000 with 3,000 missing," a Yangon-based diplomat told Reuters in Bangkok, summarising a briefing from Foreign Minister Nyan Win. "It's a very serious toll."

The last major storm to ravage Asia was Cyclone Sidr which killed 3,300 people in Bangladesh last November.

The scale of the disaster drew a rare acceptance of outside help from the diplomatically isolated generals, who spurned such approaches in the aftermath of the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami.

The U.S. Embassy in Myanmar authorised the release of $250,000 in immediate emergency aid, and U.S. first lady Laura Bush promised more would be forthcoming.

However, she urged Myanmar's military rulers to first accept a U.S. disaster response team that so far has been kept out, saying it would clear the way for broader aid.

U.S. State Department spokesman Tom Casey said a team was "standing by and ready to go into Burma", now known as Myanmar.  Continued...

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