Bangkok Post Breaking News
http://www.bangkokpost.com/breaking_news/breakingnews.php?id=127591
Aid from Thailand reaches Burma, but not victims
May 10, 2008
Geneva (dpa) - The UN refugee agency, UNHCR, said its first trucks had arrived in Burma Saturday from Mae Sot without a problem, carrying 20 tonnes of emergency aid for survivors of the cyclone.
But the Mae Sot area is far from the actual disaster area, and the aid had not reached victims of the storm, nine days ago.
The trucks, with enough emergency material to provide shelter for up to 10,000 people, had crossed over from Thailand at the Friendship Bridge border at Mae Sot. They bore plastic sheets and tents.
"This convoy marks a positive step in an aid effort so far marked by challenges and constraints," said Raymond Hall, UNHCR's Representative in Thailand.
"We hope it opens up a possible corridor to allow more international aid to reach the cyclone victims."
Hall added: "What we are sending in by road is in addition to the supplies we have already procured locally in Yangon and the 100 tons of supplies we started airlifting today from Dubai."
UNHCR has also started airlifting 100 tons of shelter supplies, including 4,500 plastic sheets and 17,000 blankets, from its Dubai stockpile to Yangon early Saturday.
The first 33 tons left on a World Food Programme aircraft with two other flights scheduled for early next week.
The refugee agency is focusing on providing emergency shelter for the cyclone victims in the Irrawaddy delta and parts of Yangon, which were among the worst hit. More than one million people are estimated to have lost their homes after Cyclone Nargis hit last Friday.
UNHCR has already distributed $50,000 worth of shelter items bought locally in the aftermath of the storm.
The lorry convoy is expected to take around two days from the border to Yangon in the south. The supplies, raided by UNHCR from its existing stockpiles normally intended for refugee camps scattered along the Thai-Burmese border, will be distributed by UNHCR staff.
UNHCR negotiated a concession for the border posts to stay open at the weekend to allow the convoys through.
UNHCR launched a $187 million appeal for Burmese Friday which included six million to provide 250,000 cyclone victims with shelter.
In depth: Cyclone Nagris
US Campaign for Burma » News
Cyclone Nargis - Breaking News - The New York Times
Maps: The Aftermath of Cyclone Nargis - The New York Times
Slide Show: Junta Allowing Little Aid After Cyclone - The New York Times
Other links re Cyclone Nagris ...
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