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Burma: Activists say Myanmar
forcing voters and neglecting aid
By Aaron Goodman
May 10, 2008 - (AlertNet) While international aid
workers wait for visas to get into Myanmar, a week after a Cyclone
Nargis killed tens of thousands and left a million homeless, rights
activists criticise the military junta for harrying people to vote
in a referendum aimed at cementing its grip on power.
They say the junta's focusing on politics instead of its citizen's
needs, and international agencies should do more to help people
prepare for disasters here and other countries where global warming
is set to ravage coastlines more and more.
"Going ahead with the referendum today shows the military has
put the referendum ahead of the needs of the people," said
Sunai Phasuk, a consultant with Human Rights Watch (HRW) in Bangkok.
Authorities postponed the referendum in the hardest- hit Irrawaddy
delta and the city of Yangon, but voting went ahead in other parts
of the country.
In the lead- up to Saturday's ballot, soldiers threatened and intimidated
voters in the isolated southeast Asian country, according to Charm
Tong, spokesperson for Shan Women's Action Network.
"The Burmese military is too busy controlling the people, instead
of helping the cyclone survivors," said Tong.
Military authorities told prisoners they would be given amnesty
and released if they voted yes, Tong said.
She said local residents in Shan State were forced to take part
in what appeared to be a referendum rehearsal. After showing their
ballot papers, voters were told they didn't have to vote again on
polling day, because their votes had already been counted.
"The regime only cares about their own power," HRW's Phasuk
said. "They continue suppressing people against the backdrop
of a humanitarian disaster."
STIRRING FLAMES?
But Phasuk warned that by failing to address its people's humanitarian
needs, the junta could be stirring the flames of what others have
said could be another widespread uprising against military rule
in a country with 53 million people.
Phasuk also joined mounting calls from around the world for Myanmar
to allow international experts and aid workers into the country.
"What is needed is heavy airlift capacity - helicopters,"
said Phasuk. "Clearly the Burmese military doesn't have that
capacity. Time is running out. Today marks a full week since the
cyclone. Time that could have been used to help survivors has been
wasted by the Burmese authorities."
Phasuk urged ASEAN member nations to play a greater role in pressuring
Myanmar's leaders to ease restrictions on foreign aid. He also criticised
China and Indonesia for blocking discussion on the issue at the
U.N. Security Council.
"There have been many countries that opened their borders to
international aid," said Phasuk.
He cited Iran, which after a 2003 earthquake killed 31,000 people
accepted U.S. assistance in spite of tense political relations.
"What is wrong with the Burmese generals?"
VISA DELAYS
As scores of aid workers and international experts prepared to wait
out the weekend in Bangkok hoping their visas would be approved
next week, rights groups criticised Myanmar's military authorities
for hampering the relief effort.
"It's part of a pattern that has emerged over the past 40 years,"
said Benjamin Zawacki, a southeast Asia researcher with Amnesty
International.
"It's a callous step. When countries like Myanmar refused or
are either unable or unwilling to meet their minimum core obligations
to their own citizens - food and health - such countries have an
obligation to seek international assistance."
He said this was the first time the international community had
considered overriding national sovereignty in disaster response.
"I think it's indicative of the level of crisis," said
Zawacki.
World Vision is one of dozens of aid groups carrying out cyclone
relief operations in Myanmar.
Two of its aid workers - an Australian, and a Japanese citizen -
were granted visas this week. Ten others are waiting for approval
in Bangkok, according to James East, the organisation's regional
communications director.
Compared with many international aid groups, World Vision's disaster
response is not as seriously hampered by visa restrictions. The
agency has some 580 local staff in Myanmar, who have already distributed
rice, water, fuel, rehydration salts and tarpaulins to 79,000 people
in the Yangon area.
FUTURE LESSONS
East says important lessons can be learned for the future from Cyclone
Nargis. Critically, he said, local citizens must be trained and
empowered to distribute aid in a crisis.
"This disaster has shown once again that the focus of the international
community has to switch from always responding after a disaster
has struck to investing in preparedness," said East.
"You end up saving lives, and the economic impact of the disaster
is weakened."
As global warming causes increasingly violent storms, and as sea
levels rice, as is widely predicted, East claimed coastal communities
in Asia will be particularly at risk.
Already, he said, large areas of land are disappearing in Bangladesh
and Papua New Guinea, and local communities are having to respond.
"These coastal communities are becoming more vulnerable,"
said East. "Mitigation is absolutely crucial."
From:http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/121041492748.htm
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