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UN SG visit Myanmar to Speed-up aid efforts | |||
| Published on May 22nd, 2008 In Photography, Blogging, Dreams, Shopping, Food, Friends, Games, Goals, Plans, Hopes-Jobs, Work, Careers-Life, Movies, News, Parties, Podcast, Philosophy, Romance-Relationships, Travel, Politics, Contests | Views 439 | ||||
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Myanmar a food scarce for its people,Once the rice bowl of Asia is in midst of Nargis hit cyclone disaster which has made millions of Myanmar citizen suffer from natural catastrophe and now the aid trickle has added more suffering.It is estimated that more than 1,50,000 people have died in this catstrophe and millions lay starved,await health aid,drinking water and basic amenties to live shelter,clothes. Mayhem and suffering on increase in Myanmar,the Secretary General of United Nations Ban-ki-Moon is visiting today to convince the Myanmar Junta to speed-up the international aid efforts by allowing free access to their teams and logistic supports as Helicopter,Vehicals and medical teams. Myanmar a reclusive nation,governing its people on strategy that of Communist with frugal freedom for its people and restrictive to the global media or international agencies may not allow free access to their cylone ravaged area of Irrawaddy delta.Secerary General efforts will go in vain but being the International head he finds its necessary to give a clarion call on humanitarian aids for cause on which the International organisation have been instituted. Children,teenagers,among orphans victim may fall prey to human traffickers as many hundreds waiting in shelters,some of them picked-up by nice peoples and many teenagers girls seen begging on streets could be easy prey for them to enter flesh traade.Myanmar is third in the world in human trafficking as per vailable reports. Than Shwe is touring the disaster zone as per the state media reports into the hardest-hit regions of the Irrawaddy delta for the first time.Till Sunday, General Than Shwe,the senior general had not made a public appearance or remark about the disaster. “While the ASEAN initiative may turn out to be a step forward, it does not have the capacity to address all the urgent needs faced by Burma"s cyclone survivors," said Brad Adams, Asia director at Human Rights Watch. UN aid official John Holmes was allowed yesterday to glimpse how desperate the situation has become, as he toured part of the delta, where entire villages were washed away. UN chief Ban Ki-moon, set to visit the hardest-hit regions of Burma on Thursday ahead of weekend fund-raising talk in Rangoon. |
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