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UN halts aid to Myanmar after junta seizes supplies

post #1 of 17
Thread Starter 
From the AP via Yahoo
1 hour, 3 minutes ago


YANGON, Myanmar - Myanmar's junta seized U.N. aid shipments Friday meant for a multitude of hungry and homeless survivors of last week's devastating cyclone, forcing the world body to suspend further help.

The aid included 38 tons of high-energy biscuits and arrived in Myanmar on Friday on two flights from Bangladesh and the United Arab Emirates.

"All of the food aid and equipment that we managed to get in has been confiscated," U.N. World Food Program spokesman Risley said.

"For the time being, we have no choice but to end further efforts to bring critical needed food aid into Myanmar at this time," he said.

At least 62,000 people are dead or missing in Myanmar, entire villages are submerged in the Irrawaddy delta and aid groups warned that the area is on the verge of a medical disaster.

The U.N. has grown increasingly critical of Myanmar's military rulers' refusal to let foreign aid workers into the country while the junta appeared overwhelmed and more than 1 million homeless people waited for food, medicine and shelter.

"The frustration caused by what appears to be a paperwork delay is unprecedented in modern humanitarian relief efforts," Risley said. "It's astonishing."

The junta said in a statement Friday it was grateful to the international community for its assistance — which has included 11 chartered planes loaded with aid supplies — but the best way to help was just to send in material rather than personnel.

Nearly a week after the storm, survivors are now having to contend with rotting corpses of people and animals as they wait for food, clean water and medicine.

"Many are not buried and lie in the water. They have started rotting and the stench is beyond words," Anders Ladekarl, head of the Danish Red Cross.

About 20,000 body bags were being sent so volunteers from the Myanmar chapter of the Red Cross can start collecting bodies, he said.

The U.N. was putting together an urgent appeal to fund aid efforts over the next six months. Spokeswoman Elisabeth Byrs told reporters that the exact amount of the appeal would be specified later Friday.

The International Organization for Migration says it is asking for $8 million as part of the appeal. The U.N. refugee agency says it needs $6 million to fund the immediate shelter and household needs of 250,000 people.


No matter how bad our natural disasters are, that are no match for the politcal disasters going on in the world
post #2 of 17
Who's running this country? M.Bison?

If they weren't responsible for such crimes I'd be amused by how over the top villainous the regime is.
post #3 of 17
Holy sh*t. It's a horror movie. And even though I don't know the facts yet, it's a fair guess that we will find American multinationals in business with the monsters leading the junta.

Well, I'm going to contribute to the Red Cross/Unicef. Beyond that I'm not sure what we can do.
post #4 of 17
Well if Myanmar's military junta won't get needed supplies to its citizens then I'm joining up with a group of Christian missionaries who will. Wish us luck!
post #5 of 17
I watched a report by that BBC reporter that was deported about the relief effort. The "rescue crews" were digging bodies out of the rubble and dumping them in the river en masse. I could not believe my eyes. What's going on over there is completely insane.
post #6 of 17
Quote:
Originally Posted by Moltisanti View Post
Well if Myanmar's military junta won't get needed supplies to its citizens then I'm joining up with a group of Christian missionaries who will. Wish us luck!
Good luck!

Watch the runway on touchdown, though. Others may beat you there to help Madonna hand out Kabbalah Water.
post #7 of 17
Quote:
Originally Posted by Moltisanti View Post
Well if Myanmar's military junta won't get needed supplies to its citizens then I'm joining up with a group of Christian missionaries who will. Wish us luck!
A word of advice, steer clear of their truck mounted .50 cal.
post #8 of 17
Be sure to hire out a tough looking, quiet mumbler of a snake catcher. He'll be more valuable than your jackass Christian leader can ever hope to know.

And yt, it is quite possible for other countries to be just as fucked up and amoral as American corporations. And it is a sad state of the world when something bad like this happens and we immediately go 'Alright, which greedy old American white guy is to blame for it this time?'
post #9 of 17
Quote:
Originally Posted by Doc Happenin View Post
Be sure to hire out a tough looking, quiet mumbler of a snake catcher. He'll be more valuable than your jackass Christian leader can ever hope to know.
This needs to happen.

Quote:
And yt, it is quite possible for other countries to be just as fucked up and amoral as American corporations. And it is a sad state of the world when something bad like this happens and we immediately go 'Alright, which greedy old American white guy is to blame for it this time?'
I am just so tired of watching the destruction around the world and then learning after the fact how diamond extraction, or oil, or sugar, or whatever commodity is in fact being paid for in blood for the profit margins of American corporations. Yes, other countries are f*cked up, but I don't live in those countries or pledge allegiance to them. I just think we should make ourselves aware of the bigger picture before we start railing against despots who may in fact be in league with our rich countrymen.

Added:
Turns out there's no shortage of multinationals from all over the globe doing handy business with the junta, including:

Quote:
Chevron
Since its 2005 takeover of Unocal, US oil giant Chevron has been one of the joint venture partners developing the Yadana offshore gas field in Burma, which earns the military regime millions of dollars. Chevron also owns Texaco.
"The Dirty List"
post #10 of 17
Wow. It's even worse than suspected. From Firedoglake.com:

Quote:
You see, Condi Rice was for 10 years a director on the board of Chevron. She even had a Chevron oil tanker named after her (although the company, when it realized that this was a political liability for Rice, later changed it to the Altair Voyager because of the "unnecessary attention" the naming caused).



And the Myanmar government -- a military junta that has ruled with an iron fist, despite the best efforts of pro-democracy agitators like Aung San Su Kyi and the recent protests by Buddhist monks -- is being propped up almost entirely by Chevron.

Amy Goodman wrote about this during the monks' protests:

Quote:
Fueling the military junta that has ruled for decades are Burma's natural-gas reserves, controlled by the Burmese regime in partnership with the U.S. multinational oil giant Chevron, the French oil company Total and a Thai oil firm. Offshore natural-gas facilities deliver their extracted gas to Thailand through Burma's Yadana pipeline. The pipeline was built with slave labor, forced into servitude by the Burmese military.

The original pipeline partner, Unocal, was sued by EarthRights International for the use of slave labor. As soon as the suit was settled out of court, Chevron bought Unocal.

Chevron's role in propping up the brutal regime in Burma is clear. According to Marco Simons, U.S. legal director at EarthRights International: "Sanctions haven't worked because gas is the lifeline of the regime. Before Yadana went online, Burma's regime was facing severe shortages of currency. It's really Yadana and gas projects that kept the military regime afloat to buy arms and ammunition and pay its soldiers."

The U.S. government has had sanctions in place against Burma since 1997. A loophole exists, though, for companies grandfathered in. Unocal's exemption from the Burmese sanctions has been passed on to its new owner, Chevron.
As Goodman notes, Condi Rice was on the Chevron board at the time it was involved in bloody suppression of non-violent protesters in Nigeria, so it's not as though she's terribly sensitive to such things as the open murder of Buddhist monks. Far more important to keep the natural gas flowing, you know.

For an administration that likes to defend its oil wars in places like Iraq by holding up the fig leaf of the awful oppression suffered by the Iraqi people under Saddam, isn't it funny how it seems less than eager to end such oppression in other countries where the gas is flowing under the control of American corporations?

With the death toll now at 65,000 and counting, the ruling military junta in the country is refusing all aid -- they even went so far as to seize a large shipment of aid from the United Nations yesterday. So even beyond the 100,000 or so likely to have been killed by the storm, many thousands more are going to die of malnutrition and disease.

The Bush administration, of course, could do something about this, not least by teaming up with its friends at Chevron to apply the appropriate pressure on the junta. But instead it sends out Laura to call them naughty boys. And when the regime refuses aid for its own starving people, the Bush squad just throws up its collective hands and says, "Who could have foreseen this?"

I guess we can call it the global Katrina technique.
post #11 of 17
Thread Starter 
What we need to do is invade Burma, take out the corrupt regime, and put in a new, democratic government.

It's how Dad did it, it's how America does it, and it's worked pretty well in Iraq so far.

Discuss
post #12 of 17
You know, if I was going to plan a rescue mission into the jungles of Myanmar to rescue Christian missionaries I'd want Moltisanti on the team for his knowledge of B-action movie rescue plans and his witty sense of humor.

But he went with them. Damn it!

Ok, so who's signing up for the rescue?
post #13 of 17
Quote:
Originally Posted by Moltisanti View Post
Well if Myanmar's military junta won't get needed supplies to its citizens then I'm joining up with a group of Christian missionaries who will. Wish us luck!
Got guns? No? You ain't changin' nuthin'.
post #14 of 17
If only there was oil in the joint, then America could toss these evil clowns out of office under the auspices of 'spreading freedom'
post #15 of 17
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jakespeare View Post
Ok, so who's signing up for the rescue?
We'll need the world's best Deep Core driller. Him, Steve Buscemi and that Affleck fella.
post #16 of 17
Quote:
Originally Posted by The Rain Dog View Post
If only there was oil in the joint, then America could toss these evil clowns out of office under the auspices of 'spreading freedom'
Well, there IS oil...but Chevron's already got it covered. Junta = smarter than Saddam.

See, there's your story, kiddos... Country in bed with American multi-national? A-okay! Country not in bed with American multi-national? Dirty terrrorist supporters!!
post #17 of 17
And it keeps getting better.

Quote:
BANGKOK, May 10 -- Burma's ruling junta went ahead with a constitutional referendum Saturday, as foreign aid slowly trickled into the storm-ravaged country, where tens of thousands of people are dead or missing since a cyclone struck a week ago
Why would a cyclone stop democracy? First Aid, maybe, but not the freedom of it's (dying) citizens...
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