MPs condemn Burma's 'deplorable' cyclone response
Burmese-Canadians struggle to get word from relatives
Last Updated: Friday, May 9, 2008 | 11:48 AM ET
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Burma aid
Cyclone relief
- World Vision
- Agency has assessment teams on the ground and wants to raise $3 million from Canadians.The organization is already assisting more than 100,000 people in Rangoon and the Irrawaddy Delta region by providing rice, water, and critical supplies including sarongs, T-shirts, mosquito nets, tarpaulins and blankets.
- Canadian Red Cross
- Funds raised will be used to provide survivors with basic supplies and emergency shelter, and to ensure people have access to health care and clean water. More detailed assessments are being carried out to determine longer-term needs. You can donate on-line, call 1-800-418-1111 or contact your local Canadian Red Cross office for details on donating.
- Samaritan's Purse Canada
- Working with indigenous partners in Burma (also known as Myanmar) to assess and provide aid to those affected. The Calgary-based organization has been working in Burma for nearly a decade, providing safe drinking water, medical training and children's ministries. You can also donate by calling 1-800-663-6500.
- Salvation Army
- Has been on the ground in Burma since 1915, and now has more than 40 ministry units, children's homes, shared farms, pig loan programs, 60 well projects to deliver clean water, education and tuition programs as well as several health clinics. You can call 1-800-SAL-ARMY (725-2769), visit the website, or drop off financial donations at the closest Salvation Army unit in your area, specifying your gift is for the Myanmar Cyclone Relief Fund.
- Humanitarian Coalition
- CARE Canada, Oxfam Canada, Oxfam-Québec and Save the Children have formed the Humanitarian Coalition to ensure those who need help can get it quickly and efficiently. Members of all four agencies are working in areas hard hit by the cyclone. Donate online or call 1-800-464-9154.
- UNICEF
- UNICEF, which has been in Burma since 1950, currently has about 130 people working in the country. Staff are providing emergency supplies, clean water, food and shelter to children and their families. Donate online or call 1-877-955-3111.
- Médecins Sans Frontières
- Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) teams in Burma are delivering medical care, food and essential supplies such as plastic sheeting and diesel to fuel water pumps. Medical teams are travelling to remote areas hard hit by the cyclone. Call 1-800-982-7903 or donate online.
- Mennonite Central Committee (MCC)
- MCC is seeking donations for its Myanmar relief efforts. The 88-year-old organization is working with trusted partners within the country who are responding to the tragic aftermath of cyclone Nargis.
- World Society for the Protection of Animals
- As many as 48 million working animals needed to plough the rice fields in the coming year may have been wiped out by the Burmese cyclone, the WSPA estimates. With the loss of these cattle and buffalo, thousands of hectares of land could be left unploughed, leaving millions of people at risk of economic ruin and starvation. The UN's Food and Agriculture Organization has asked this agency to produce recommendations for the relief and recovery of livestock, and the WSPA's Emergency Response Team for Asia will be entering the country to deliver relief aid for animals.
The House of Commons unanimously passed a motion on Friday condemning the Burmese government's "deplorable response" to victims of the deadly cyclone that has devastated the country.
The motion comes as Burma's isolationist junta has begun seizing supplies intended for 1.5 million cyclone survivors and continues to refuse to give visas to relief workers looking to help victims.
Humanitarian agencies fear delays in issuing visas to relief workers could push the death toll from last Saturday's cyclone in Burma, also known as Myanmar, above 100,000 as victims run out of safe drinking water and food.
Members of Parliament unanimously agreed to the motion, introduced by House Leader Peter Van Loan, that "denounce[d] the Burmese military regime's deplorable response to the crisis."
The House also condemned the regime's "unprecedented seizure" of aid shipments and urged the junta to to allow unrestricted access to aid agencies and nongovernmental organizations.
Ottawa has offered its Disaster Assistance Response Team, consisting of about 200 soldiers who are sent to disasters to provide clean drinking water and medical treatment until long-term aid arrives.
Canada has already pledged $2 million for relief efforts, with $500,000 of that going to the Red Cross, but a government official confirmed Thursday that Canada will provide additional funds once the scale of the disaster is assessed.
Phone lines, e-mail not working, says relative
But as Canada's politicians spoke out, many Burmese-Canadians with relatives in the country are having trouble hearing anything at all.
Khaing Lin moved to Canada with her brother and sister nine years ago, but her parents still live in Burma.
Calling her hometown has become a daily ritual for Lin, a 23-year old McGill University graduate living in Montreal.
"Nothing," she told CBC News as she tried the number again. "There is not even a dial tone. I can try again, but it's going to be the same thing."
She said she hasn't been able to reach anyone in Burma by e-mail either. Her mother happened to be in Rangoon the day the cyclone hit.
"I'm pretty sure she should be OK," Lin said. "I haven't heard anything, so it's not 100 per cent certain, but I'm praying and hoping that she will be OK."
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