May 30, 2008
AFP
YANGON - MYANMAR'S ruling junta lashed out at foreign aid donors on Friday, saying cyclone victims did not need supplies of 'chocolate bars' and could instead survive by eating frogs and fish.
The New Light of Myanmar newspaper, a government mouthpiece, also warned that foreign relief workers could snoop inside homes, and condemned donors for linking aid money to full access to the hardest-hit regions in the Irrawaddy Delta.
The tirade came as the junta tightened its political grip on the country, extending democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi's house arrest and announcing that its new constitution has been enacted.
Despite the harsh statements in official media, aid agencies say they have had some success in receiving visas and securing access to the delta, which suffered the brunt of the May 2 to 3 storm that left 133,000 dead or missing.
An assessment team from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) was set to arrive in Yangon on Friday for a nearly two-week mission to determine how best to help the 2.4 million survivors in desperate need of food, shelter and medicine.
After several days of praising the work of the United Nations and charities, the regime's official newspaper renewed its attacks on foreign aid and insisted Myanmar could survive without outside help.
'The government and the people are like parents and children,' the paper said. 'We, all the people, were pleased with the efforts of the government.'
The paper said that granting free access for aid workers in the delta means donors 'are to be given permission to inspect all the houses thoroughly at will'.
Myanmar needs US$11 billion (S$15 billion) to recover from the storm, but donors have pledged just US$150 million so far, it said.
'Myanmar people are capable enough of rising from such natural disasters even if they are not provided with international assistance,' the newspaper said.
'Myanmar people can easily get fish for dishes by just fishing in the fields and ditches,' the paper said.
'In the early monsoon, large edible frogs are abundant. The people (of the Irrawaddy delta) can survive with self-reliant efforts even if they are not given chocolate bars from (the) international community,' it added.
No aid agencies are known to have actually provided chocolate bars to victims of Cyclone Nargis, which struck the impoverished country four weeks ago.
The UN's World Food Programme gives rice, beans and special high-energy biscuits designed to provide nutrition to people without regular food supplies.
The United Nations estimates that about one million people in the delta are still without emergency aid.
The official newspaper also took a swipe at a world monetary organisation for refusing to give aid - apparently a reference to the World Bank, which has said no loans could be given because Myanmar has not been repaying its debts.
It also criticised countries for maintaining sanctions on the regime despite the cyclone devastation.
'Do such countries really have humanitarian spirit?' the paper said.
It was apparently referring to the US, which renewed sanctions on the regime two weeks after the storm, accusing the military junta of suppressing the pro-democracy movement.
The US has insisted the sanctions will not affect humanitarian aid, which US military planes have helped deliver into the country. -- AFP
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