Myanmar junta puts on ‘show’

YANGON, Myanmar — Myanmar’s junta kept a French navy ship laden with aid waiting outside its maritime border on Saturday, and showed off neatly laid-out state relief camps to diplomats.

The stage-managed tour appeared aimed at countering global criticism of the junta’s failure to provide for survivors of Cyclone Nargis, which left at least 134,000 people dead or missing.

The junta flew 60 diplomats and U.N. officials in helicopters to three places in the Irrawaddy delta where camps, aid and survivors were put on display. The diplomats were not swayed.

“It was a show,” Shari Villarosa, the top U.S. diplomat in Myanmar, told The Associated Press by telephone after returning to Yangon. “That’s what they wanted us to see.”

The relief group Save the Children UK warned that thousands of children could die of starvation within two or three weeks unless more aid gets into the country quickly.

“With hundreds of thousands of people still not receiving aid, many of these children will not survive much longer,” the charity said in a statement. “Children may already be dying as a result of a lack of food.”

Meanwhile, a French navy ship that arrived Saturday off Myanmar’s shores loaded with food, medication and fresh water was given the now-familiar red light, a response that France’s U.N. ambassador, Jean-Maurice Ripert, called “nonsense.”

“We have small boats which could allow us to go through the delta to most of the regions where no one has accessed yet,” he said a day earlier at U.N. headquarters. “We have small helicopters to drop food, and we have doctors.”

The USS Essex, an amphibious assault ship, and its battle group have been waiting to join in the relief effort as well. U.S. Marine flights from their makeshift headquarters in Utapao, Thailand, continued Saturday — bringing the total to 500,000 pounds of aid delivered — but negotiations to allow helicopters to fly directly to the disaster zone were stalled.

Britain’s prime minister accused authorities in Myanmar of behaving inhumanely by preventing foreign aid from reaching victims, and said the country’s regime cares more about its own survival than the welfare of its people.

“This is inhuman,” Gordon Brown told the British Broadcasting Corp.

Brown said a natural disaster “is being made into a man-made catastrophe by the negligence, the neglect and the inhuman treatment of the Burmese people by a regime that is failing to act and to allow the international community to do what it wants to do.”

Myanmar’s media, which has repeatedly broadcast footage of generals reassuring refugees calmly sitting in clean tents, announced Friday that the death toll from Cyclone Nargis had nearly doubled to 78,000 with about 56,000 missing.

Aid groups say even those estimates are low.

According to the international Red Cross, the death toll alone is probably about 128,000, with many more deaths possible from disease and starvation unless help gets quickly to some 2.5 million survivors of the disaster.

But seeing that help gets to the victims is not the first priority of Myanmar’s rulers. The military, which took power in a 1962 coup, says all aid must be delivered to the government for distribution and has barred foreigners from leaving Yangon, putting up a security cordon around the country’s main city.

Myanmar has been slightly more open to aid from its neighbors.

It has accepted Thai and Indian medical teams, which arrived in Yangon on Saturday. The 32-member Thai team was expected to travel to the delta in the coming days, said Dr. Surachet Satitniramai, director of Thailand’s National Medical Emergency Services Institute.

The Indian team consists of 50 doctors and paramedics, said Indian Air Force spokesman Wing Cmdr. Manish Gandhi. He could not immediately say if they will be allowed to go to the delta.

With the monsoon season coming, Myanmar was bracing for a long haul ahead.

Though patches of hot sun broke through Saturday, heavy rains since the cyclone have hampered relief efforts. Despite the overabundance of water in the flooded delta, shortages of water that is fresh enough to drink grew more severe by the day.

In one town, tired, hungry refugees stood awaiting food and water in the sun beside flooded rice paddies, demolished monasteries and thatched huts. With the arrival of each vehicle carrying precious supplies, they jumped with excitement and surged ahead to get a share.

They were among the lucky ones — aid was actually coming.

“The further you go, the worse the situation,” said an overwhelmed doctor in the town of Twante, just southwest of Yangon, helping a locally organized relief effort there.

“Near Yangon, people are getting a lot of help and it’s still bad,” said the doctor, who refused to give her name for fear of being punished by the regime. “In the remote delta villages, we don’t even want to imagine.”

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