Catastrophic flooding claims 46 lives in Myanmar – thousands displaced

Myanmar Floods A
August 2015MYANMARThe death toll from flooding in Myanmar has climbed to 46, with more than 200,000 people affected, the Ministry of Social Welfare, Relief and Resettlement said Monday. The flooding has affected residents in 11 of Myanmar’s 14 states and divisions, the ministry said. In addition to the damage to housing and farmland, infrastructure has been badly hit, with roads and rail lines cut in many areas and telecommunication links broken. Myanmar has suffered heavy rains, winds and flooding since Cyclone Komen made landfall in Bangladesh on 30 July, causing landslides and damage in different parts of the country, according to United Nations agencies. “The floods are hitting children and families who are already very vulnerable, including those living in camps in Rakhine state,” said Shalini Bahuguna, from the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF).
There are 140,000 displaced children and families in Rakhine alone. “Beyond the immediate impact, the floods will have a longer term impact on the livelihoods of these families,” she warned. According to the Myanmar Government, 39 people have died and over 200,000 people across the country are in need of lifesaving assistance. Twelve out of Myanmar’s 14 states and regions have been affected by the rains. On 31 July, President U Thein Sein issued a statement declaring natural disaster zones in four regions, including Rakhine, where access is limited due to flooding, road blockages and landslides.
“Initial reports indicate that there is extensive damage to shelters and other infrastructure in camps around Sittwe [Rakhine’s capital], where some 100,000 displaced people are staying,” stressed the UN Office for the Coordination for Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) in an update from 30 July. Limited information is availablethis this stage on the situation in Magway region and Chin state. In one township alone in Magway, around 70 villages are reported to be affected by floods and people in the area being relocated to schools, monasteries and other safe locations. In Chin state, at least 100 houses reported have been destroyed by landslides, pointed out OCHA. Local authorities, the Government, the military, as well as the Myanmar Red Cross Society and local civil society organizations, with support from the UN and international organizations, are responding to the floods in different parts of the country, carrying out rescue operations and providing food, water, blankets, medical and other basic necessities to those affected.
Against that background, vulnerable children in Myanmar, UNICEF says, face a “double catastrophe” as floods add to the hardships of poverty, violence and conflict. UNICEF is working closely with other UN agencies is working closely with the Myanmar authorities, dispatching assessment teams to affected areas to identify the priority needs of children and families in terms of water and sanitation, health care, and nutrition. “UNICEF has already supported the distribution of water purification tablets and hygiene kits to the affected areas,” Ms. Bahuguna said. “We are working…to get emergency messages out to local communities through radio, to tell people how to prevent water borne diseases.” –UN News WSJ
This entry was posted in Catastrophic Insurance losses mount, Civilizations unraveling, Climate unraveling, Cloudburst storms with flashflooding, Cyclone or Hurricane, Deluge from torrential rains, Earth Changes, Earth Watch, Electric power disruption & grid failure, Environmental Threat, Extreme Weather Event, Flooding, Health guideliness issued, High-risk potential hazard zone, Human behavioral change after disaster, Infrastructure collapse, Pestilence Watch, Prophecies referenced, Signs of Magnetic Field weakening, Time - Event Acceleration, Water Crisis - Conflict. Bookmark the permalink.

2 Responses to Catastrophic flooding claims 46 lives in Myanmar – thousands displaced

  1. Any Burmese government, whether NLD or USDP should understand that building a dam across the river to generate hydroelectric power is the worst idea, as I said already before the beginning of the project. The dam hasn’t been finished, and yet we obviously see this catastrophic flooding through out Burma. Try to start building clean energy station, which is nuclear energy now, unless the government want to drown people, houses, farmlands and all the properties in Burma in October (moon soon) this year or the same time next year. Change your bad idea now.

    Like

    • Yellow Bird says:

      Professor, i sympathize- the dam is a bad idea…
      nuclear is even worse.
      the only thing “clean” about it is the greenwashing its been given by corrupt people of power who stand to profit enormously.
      look at Fukushima. look at Chernobyl. look at Guam and the Marshall Islands. look at NavajoLand. really, really look.
      i don’t know the solution for your people, i only know the whole world will suffer immensely for having embraced nuclear. many allready have.

      Like

All comments are moderated. We reserve the right not to post any comment deemed defamatory, inappropriate, or spam.