THE IMPACT OF CYCLONE NARGIS ON
BURMA/MYANMAR:
INFORMATION, COMMENTARY, VACANCIES, DONATIONS
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engine
To go to the main Cyclone Nargis
section, click here
INFORMATION AND COMMENTARY
QUICK CHECK
For recent updates, go to ReliefWeb IRIN: Humanitarian
News and Analysis (UNOCHA) OCHA Situation Reports (1) or OCHA Situation Reports (2) Humanitarian Information Center for Myanmar (HIC) ASEAN Secretariat Cyclone Nargis page Democratic Voice of
Burma The Irrawaddy Google English and to any news sources (see
below) you trust not covered by Google
INTER-GOVERNMENTAL SOURCES
ReliefWeb (regular updates, including maps) IRIN: Humanitarian
News and Analysis (UNOCHA) OCHA Online OCHA
Situation Reports (1) or OCHA
Situation Reports (2) (if the latest report is not here, search ReliefWeb) Humanitarian Information Center for Myanmar (HIC) UN Information Centre, Rangoon World Food Programme
(WFP) WHO WHO Regional Office for S-E Asia UNHCR UNICEF FAO FAO
(Asian Regional Office)
FAO Myanmar Emergency
page (maps etc) International
Organisation for Migration (IOM) (results of a search for Myanmar Cyclone. See
also the IOM home page)
INTER-AGENCY CLUSTERS
The response to Cyclone Nargis
by the UN agencies and their partners is based on 11 clusters within which
different organisations cooperate on specific areas
of work. The home page for the clusters is Humanitarian
Information Center for Myanmar (HIC)
For the most detailed information on each area, see the web-page of the
cluster in question: Agriculture
Cluster Site Early Recovery
Cluster Information Education
Cluster Information Emergency
Shelter Cluster Information Food
Assistance Cluster information Health Cluster
Information Logistics
Cluster Information Nutrition
Cluster Information Protection
Cluster Information Telecommunications
cluster information Water and
Sanitation Cluster Information For
a concise overview, normally about one day behind, see the updates and
summaries in the Sector Status of the Center
for Excellence in Disaster Management & Humanitarian Assistance
HUMAN
RIGHTS DIMENSIONS
The most recent report of the UN Special Rapporteur on Myanmar,
Human
Rights Council - 8th Session: Report of the Special Rapporteur
on Myanmar and a
new Amnesty International document, “Myanmar
Briefing: Human rights Concerns a month after Cyclone Nargis”
discuss human rights violations related
to the cyclone and its aftermath. The protection of human rights is of
concern to all agencies, especially those working within the Protection
Cluster. The fact that the situation of human rights in Burma/Myanmar has been
on the UN’s human rights agenda for two decades highlights the need to combine
human rights and humanitarian approaches to the disaster. In particular, given
the large number of people displaced by the cyclone, the work of the UN Special
Representative on Internal Displacement, Walter Kaelin,
and others working on human rights
protection in the context of natural disasters is especially relevant – see, for instance, the Brookings-Bern
Project’s Human
Rights and Natural Disasters: Operational Guidelines and Field Manual on Human
Rights Protection in Situations of Natural Disaster (March 2008) and other publications by the Brookings
Institution and the Special Representative. Among organizations which
discuss the human rights dimensions of the disaster are Asian Human Rights Commission Human Rights Watch Amnesty
International and FIDH
For background material, see also the Human Rights, UN System and ILO
sections of the Online Burma Library.
NON-GOVERNMENTAL ORGANISATIONS
Asian Human Rights Commission (Important analyses and statements) Center
for Excellence in Disaster Management & Humanitarian Assistance (updates end 20 June) International
Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) International
Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) (results of a search for Myanmar)
Human Rights Watch Amnesty
International
GOVERNMENTS
ASEAN
Secretariat Cyclone Nargis page USAID DFID (UK) ECHO (French) ECHO (English)
MAPS
ReliefWeb Map Centre (results of an Advanced Search for “
FAO Myanmar Emergency
page (maps etc)
BUDDHIST SOURCES
MERCY
(Myanmar Emergency Relief for Cyclone Disaster) (information about the
relief activities of Burmese Buddhist monks and lay people)
Democratic Voice of Burma The Irrawaddy Burma
Partnership Mizzima ABITSU
Rebound 88 Yangon
Globe Burma Campaign UK ALTSEAN-Burma Burma
Cyclone Update (NCGUB)
STATE
PEACE AND DEVELOPMENT COUNCIL (SPDC)
The
New Light of Myanmar (Read how the
SPDC is presenting its role in the situation. N.B. files up to 10MB!) MRTV-3 (
PRIVATE SECTOR MEDIA IN
The Myanmar Times (current issue) The
Myanmar Times (archive)
ASIAN
MEDIA
Bangkok Post The
Times of India (Search for Myanmar OR Burma) Asia Times
Online (Search for Myanmar cyclone) Xinhua Japanese
Press (Google
search results for “Myanmar cyclone”) Al
Jazeera (results of a search for “Myanmar”)
The Guardian (UK) Times
Online The
Telegraph BBC BBC Burmese service CNN New York Times Christian Science
Monitor International
Herald Tribune
World News Le Monde Le Point Liberation L’Express Rue 89 20
minutes (dans ces sites
recherchér: “Cyclone birmanie
”) Der
Spiegel ZDF Stern Tagesschau
WIRE SERVICES
Associated Press Reuters Reuters AlertNet
SEARCH ENGINES
(The Google results
don’t quite work for Arabic, Chinese, Japanese, Russian and Thai – would
someone who can search in these languages please send me the URLs of the
results)
Google Arabic (“Cyclone
Burma OR Nargis OR Myanmar”) Google Chinese (“Cyclone Myanmar OR Burma OR Nargis”) Google Deutsch (“Zyklon Burma OR Nargis OR
Myanmar”)
Google
English (Search results for “Cyclone
“Cyclone birmanie
OR Nargis OR Myanmar”) Google Italiano (“Ciclone Myanmar OR Burma OR Nargis”) Google Japanese (“Cyclone
Myanmar OR Burma OR Nargis”)
Google Russian (“Cyclone Myanmar OR Burma OR Nargis”) Google Thai
(“Cyclone Myanmar OR Burma OR Nargis”)
Yahoo
English (Search results for
“Cyclone Myanmar OR Burma OR Nargis”) Multiple languages also available on Yahoo.
OTHER ONLINE SOURCES
Wikipedia
– Cyclone Nargis page
VACANCIES
For those wishing to
do humanitarian work in Burma/Myanmar
ReliefWeb
Vacancies page Vacancies in Myanmar - UNjobs
(derived from the ReliefWeb list, but with a little
more information)
DONATIONS
While restrictions on the
delivery of aid and access for aid workers continue, there are organizations
which already have a presence in the hardest-hit parts of the country. Below are some of those working in the
affected areas NOW, which could use your support. Most
have websites and methods to donate within your country.
BURMESE
BUDDHIST GROUPS AND THEIR SUPPORTERS
Cyclone
Nargis Orphans Appeal Sitagu Buddhist Vihara (Sagaing Division) is doing relief work in Bogalay. MERCY (Myanmar Emergency
Relief for Cyclone Disaster) Foundation for the People of Burma Burma Relief Center, Japan (BRCJ) Buddhist Relief
Mission AVAAZ
OTHER BURMESE HUMANITARIAN ORGANIZATIONS
Metta Development Foundation and Nargis Action Group Myanmar (Myanmar Egress) are local
groups working in the affected areas
Mae Tao Clinic – Emergency
Assistance Team “…The Emergency Assistance Team
(EAT-BURMA) is working at the grassroots level to provide aid and
assistance to the people affected by Cyclone Nargis
in the
Burma Relief Network Burma Myanmar Relief
Organization Friends of Burma Burma
Relief
INTERNATIONAL HUMANITARIAN AND SOLIDARITY GROUPS
Burma Campaign UK Rule of Lords, Cyclone Nargis Asian Human Rights Commission Burma
Partnership One
World AlertNet have
lists of places to send donations.
Suggestions from a relief expert has
more links and some helpful guidelines.
In the
ActionAid has started an emergency program with their
partner KDN, a church-based network working in 276 villages in the affected
areas, and five other teams are already working on how to further scale up the
response to the disaster. (Donate directly or via Disasters Emergency Committee (Burma) )
Action Against Hunger/Action Contre la Faim (ACF) is in the Yangon
area to distribute water purifying tablets and water, rehabilitate water points,
distribute essential non-food items and emergency shelters, promote basic
hygiene, perform environmental clearing and clean up, and provide food, cash
and/or vouches depending on local market accessibility. (The website shows no
obvious way to make an earmarked donation to a
Adventist Development and Relief
Agency International (ADRA) is continuing food assistance in partnership
with the World Food Program (WFP) coordinating the delivery of up to 250 metric
tons of rice to the Labutta area, which will provide
for 20,000 people for 30 days.
Aide Medicale Internationale “Rapidement mobilisée après le passage du
cyclone Nargis sur le territoire de la Birmanie/Myanmar,
Aide Médicale Internationale
assure ses premières interventions auprès des populations sinistrées
des townships de Dala, Twantay
et Seikgyi. Lundi 5 et mardi 6 mai,
les équipes d’Aide Médicale Internationale se sont rendues dans
ces zones les plus touchées
pour constater l’ampleur
des destructions et évaluer précisément
les besoins des populations qui tentent
de survivre. Aujourd’hui 8 mai, Aide Médicale Internationale met en oeuvre un
plan d’action d’urgence destiné à répondre
aux besoins essentiels des victimes du cyclone des zones de Dala, Twantay et Seikgyi.” (The website offers no obvious way to make an
earmarked donation to a
Association François-Xavier Bagnoud states that “
CARE
(with Care
International ?) emergency
assessment teams have returned to Yangon from the Irrawaddy
Delta on 9 May reporting massive destruction on a level far worse than seen in
Yangon, including whole towns and villages completely wiped out. CARE has
assessed Pathien, where 250,000 survivors were
expected to need urgent relief. CARE is purchasing supplies in
Caritas has assembled an initial team drawing on
staff from across the memberships with a strong representation from the local
region. Caritas is coordinating the relief efforts of its162 national members
and working in support of the Catholic Church in
Christian Aid is distributing water purification tablets, blankets and
medicines to 100,000 people. Supplies are being sourced from within
International
Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has sent its first flight to Myanmar of
relief goods “for those in labor camps and prisons” with 35 metric tons (39 US
tons) of relief goods, including pumps, generators, water tanks and other water
treatment equipment, as well as basic health care for about 10,000 people and
surgery material. The ICRC visits political prisoners and prisoners of war
worldwide, but stopped visitng
International Federation of Red
Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) had three planes arrive with 14 metric tons
of shelter material. All goods were cleared at customs and then distributed by
International Rescue
Committee (IRC) emergency team
members arrived in Myanmar and four additional teams are on standby for
deployment to the region as the IRC prepares for a possible outbreak of
water-borne diseases in cyclone-hit villages. In addition to aid workers on the
ground, the IRC also has medical, water, sanitation, operations and logistics
experts already in the region or ready to be dispatched to
Malteser International will send a medical team to the coastal town
of
Medecins
Sans Frontieres (MSF) or Doctors Without Borders currently has 35 staff in the
Save the Children (SC-UK) has provided assistance in affected urban townships in
Yangon covering 63,000 people across the four townships of Shwe
Pyi Tar, Thin Gan Gyun, Insein, and North Okkalapa. Trucks containing 1,000 bags of rice (30 tons),
20 rolls of tarpaulin, surgar and salt reached
World
Vision has helped almost 78,000 people in the
Partially updated 26 July 2008