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As cyclone victims wait, government refuses aid


Associated Press A Myanmar boy stands next to a box of supplies handed over to survivors of Cyclone Nargis Friday in Labutta, Myanmar.
YANGON, Myanmar—Myanmar’s junta kept a French navy ship laden with aid waiting outside its maritime border on Saturday, and showed off neatly laid out state relief camps to diplomats.

The stage-managed tour appeared aimed at countering global criticism of the junta’s failure to provide for survivors of Cyclone Nargis, which left at least 134,000 people dead or missing.

The junta flew 60 diplomats and U.N. officials in helicopters to three places in the Irrawaddy delta where camps, aid and survivors were put on display. The diplomats were not swayed.

“It was a show,” Shari Villarosa, the top U.S. diplomat in Myanmar, told The Associated Press by telephone after returning to Yangon. “That’s what they wanted us to see.”

Meanwhile, a French navy ship that arrived Saturday off Myanmar’s shores loaded with food, medication and fresh water was given the now familiar red light, a response that France’s U.N. ambassador, Jean-Maurice Ripert, called “nonsense.”

“We have small boats which could allow us to go through the delta to most of the regions where no one has accessed yet,” he said a day earlier at U.N. headquarters. “We have small helicopters to drop food, and we have doctors.”

The USS Essex, an amphibious assault ship, and its battle group have been waiting to join in the relief effort as well. U.S. Marine flights from their makeshift headquarters in Utapao, Thailand, continued Saturday—bringing the total to 500,000 pounds of aid delivered—but negotiations to allow helicopters to fly directly to the disaster zone were stalled.

Britain’s prime minister said the country’s regime cares more about its own survival than the welfare of its people.

“This is inhuman,” Gordon Brown told the British Broadcasting Corp. in his strongest criticism yet of Myanmar’s authoritarian government.

Brown said a natural disaster “is being made into a man-made catastrophe by the negligence, the neglect and the inhuman treatment of the Burmese people by a regime that is failing to act and to allow the international community to do what it wants to do.”

Britain’s Ministry of Defense said it had dispatched a Royal Navy frigate to the area “as a contingency.” The HMS Westminster broke away from an exercise with the French and Indian navies, a ministry spokesman said, speaking anonymously in line with military policy.

The spokesman said the ship carried a crew of 98 and was equipped with a communications facility, a Merlin helicopter, two sea boats, a doctor and a paramedic. The spokesman added that crew members are all trained in disaster relief.

Myanmar’s media, which has repeatedly broadcast footage of generals reassuring refugees calmly sitting in clean tents, announced Friday that the death toll from Cyclone Nargis had nearly doubled to 78,000 with about 56,000 missing.



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