Page 2 of 2   <      

Burma Faces 'Public Health Catastrophe,' Charity Says

Tropical Cyclone Nargis hit the nation's largest city and rice-producing delta on May 3, 2008. More storms headed toward the country as the U.N. warned that inadequate relief efforts could lead to rising death tolls.
Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.

The World Food Program, which on Friday accused authorities of impounding planeloads of emergency food, said cargo and materials sent since then had been released and sent to disaster zones. The International Committee of the Red Cross also sent a planeload of supplies Sunday, including body bags.

Yet a week on, most survivors have not yet received any help, because of the lack of supplies and logistical difficulties.

"Beyond the main arterial roads, it's a massive challenge, not only because the floodwaters are still there, but also because even when they are not, it's extremely difficult to navigate," said Marcus Prior, a WFP spokesman.

The Burmese army insists that it can manage the massive relief operation and has rebuffed offers from the United States, its longtime critic, and countries in the region for military assistance to distribute aid.

But for years, Burma's military has struggled to feed its own. Vegetables are often grown alongside the runways of army airfields, and chicken coops are usually kept behind barracks across the country, officially known as Myanmar. Troops in far-flung places have long been ordered to "live off the land" because the army command has been unable to reliably supply its 400,000-member force with the food it needs.

"The logistical system in Burma is so shaky that in the 1990s, they told regional commanders and bases outside Rangoon [the country's main city] that they had to take care of their own logistics" for basic needs, said a Western analyst who has studied Burma's military.

Military analysts warn that Burma's army has neither adequate equipment nor training to cope with the crisis, and its insistence on going it alone -- or through its own "strenuous labor" as state media call it -- could cost many lives.

"Disaster relief operations, like any military operation, require training, practice and equipment," said Robert Karniol, a regional defense writer. "Even if they were well practiced, they would have difficulties responding because of the scale."

Humanitarian groups are reluctant to cooperate with foreign militaries in disaster response. But the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami and the 2005 earthquake in Pakistan showed how foreign militaries could use specialized transportation equipment to move large quantities of supplies to hard-to-reach areas.

The Irrawaddy Delta presents the type of logistical challenge best suited for military hardware. Vast areas remain submerged, accessible only by boat or helicopter, and the region's ports are inaccessible to civilian ships as a result of the damage.

"The Myanmar military has certain assets, but in a response this size, you need to start using everything you've got," said Sebastian Rhodes Stampa, a civil-military liaison officer with the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.

"In a disaster of this scale, because of the critical needs and limited infrastructure, we would certainly advocate considering the kind of specialized capacities that foreign militaries can give in reaching the people we need to reach," he said.

Burma has allowed foreign military cargo planes to ferry supplies to the Rangoon airport but has so far refused other foreign military help.

"The regime's hope is that they will be able to weather the storm of criticism and just get the aid in and handle it themselves," the Western military expert said. "If that means they can't do enough quickly and some people die, they'll accept that."

Yet the drama could have unforeseen repercussions for a military still shaken by a crackdown in September on Buddhist monks protesting against the government.

The military expert said a disaster-relief failure, and the unnecessary loss of many lives, could undermine the morale of an institution that is built around the notion of safeguarding the Burmese people.

"There must be a great many people in the armed forces who do genuinely care about what has happened," he said. "If they hear that aid is being refused, or put in a [warehouse] and not being released, that does have the potential to impact troop morale and cohesion. And anything that shakes the cohesion and loyalty of the armed forces will shake the regime."


<       2


More World Coverage

Foreign Policy

Partner Site

Your portal to global politics, economics and ideas.

facebook

Connect Online

Share and comment on Post world news on Facebook and Twitter.

eye on the world

Eye on the World

The week's events from around the world, captured in photographs.

© 2008 The Washington Post Company