Sunday, November 2, 2008

[Myo Chit Myanmar | Dedicated for the people of Myanmar] 4 New Entries: ယေန႔ ျမန္မာ့ေရးရာ သတင္းမ်ား Nov,2nd,2008

ယေန႔ ျမန္မာ့ေရးရာ သတင္းမ်ား Nov,2nd,2008

သတင္းမ်ားကို ကိုကိုမွ အခ်ိန္ႏွင့္ တေျပးညီ တင္ဆက္ေပးေနပါသည္

( 1 )The baron who holds Burma's purse strings

( 2 )Six months after cyclone, Burmese junta tightens grip

( 3 )ေဒၚ၀င္းျမျမပါငါးဦးကို ေထာင္ခ်တာ ျပည္တြင္း ဥပေဒေတြနဲ႔ ကိုက္ညီမႈမရွိ၊ အျမန္ျပန္လႊတ္ေပးဖို႔ ေတာင္းဆို

( 4 )Myanmar activists losing powerful ally

( 5 )Myanmar activists losing powerful ally with departure of Laura Bush

( 6 )Myanmar's PM to attend two subregional summits in Vietnam

( 7 )Cautious optimism six months after cyclone lashed Myanmar

( 8 )Myanmar cyclone survivors struggle on

REEL AWARENESS

REEL AWARENESS - Amnesty International Toronto Human Rights Film Festival, November 13-16, 2008
 
WHERE: National Film Board Cinema,
            150 John Street
 
WHAT: Amnesty International Toronto celebrates its third annual Real Awareness Film Festival with four days of some of the best human rights documentary and feature films shown around the world.
 
The 2008 program features compelling films, guest speakers, panel discussions, the opportunity to take action on a variety of human rights issues and much, much more.
 
We hope you will join us in protecting and promoting human rights worldwide!
 
Admission: PWYC at the door (suggested donation $5).
 
For more info on the festival, films and schedule please call 416 363 9933 ext.33 or go to www.aito.ca/reelawareness

Six months after Nargis ( World Vision )

Myanmar: Six months on, cyclone-affected still in need

This farmer has now sown his rice crop four times since Cyclone Nargis in May, but the land is still too salinated to support the young plants 

Yangon, November 1 - As we mark the six-month anniversary of Cyclone Nargis, World Vision urges donors and agencies to recognise the significant achievements that have made in Myanmar and to continue to respond to the needs of those affected.

Cyclone Nargis, the worst disaster in the country's recorded history, struck Myanmar on the evening of the 2nd of May this year. State figures say 140,000 people were left dead or missing, and 800,000 people were driven from their homes.

World Vision began responding to the disaster within days, focusing on food aid, shelter, and child protection. After rapid assessments were completed, it became apparent that one of the greatest impacts of the disaster was the destruction of livelihoods across the hard-hit Ayeyewaddy Delta and Yangon Division.

Some 2 million livestock were lost to the storm, a million acres of rice paddy inundated with salt water, and hundreds of fishing vessels and critical infrastructure wiped out.

Needs remain great for those affected.

Less than two-thirds of those surveyed in a recent World Vision assessment of the Delta reported having access to safe, clean drinking water.

One third reported reducing the number of meals eaten in a day within the past one month, illustrating the continued food insecurity, still faced by many of those affected.

And up to 30 per cent of children aged 5 to 11 were not enrolled in school at the time of the assessment, and of children 12 to 17 more than half were not.

During the half-year since the cyclone hit, World Vision has been part of the international relief response to support the 2.4 million who were severely affected.

International aid has brought significant gains for its hundreds of thousands of recipients in the country, helping children to recover from their experiences and return to school; helping families to meet their dietary needs; and helping communities to rebuild their livelihoods.

Six months on, real progress can be shown in the lives of those affected. But it is clear that this country needs a renewed commitment by the international community to continue to support the survivors of Cyclone Nargis.

This anniversary is only the first step towards a full recovery for the people of the Delta. Much work is needed in the months and indeed years ahead if the wins shown by the relief response thus far are to be turned into long-term gains for those affected.

"Let us not forget the long-term nature of recovery and preparedness," urged World Vision Myanmar's National Director, James Tumbuan. "And let us not turn our backs on the children of the Delta whose hopes for a brighter future have been rekindled over the last six months."

It is imperative that the initial attention and support given to the relief response to Cyclone Nargis continues so that communities can be strengthened, and be given the opportunity to return to pre-cyclone levels of prosperity, and beyond.

For further information or interviews please contact Ashley Jonathan Clements in Myanmar, on: +95 95 035 983 or +95 986 100 79 or visit wvasiapacific.org.

 

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