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Cyclone death toll nears 4,000 in Myanmar, state radio says
05/05/08 YANGON, Myanmar — Almost 4,000 people were killed and nearly 3,000 others are unaccounted for after a devastating cyclone in Myanmar, a state radio station said today. Tropical Cyclone Nargis hit the Southeast Asian country, also known as Burma, early Saturday with winds of up to 120 mph. The cyclone blew roofs off hospitals and schools and cut electricity in Myanmar’s largest city, Yangon. The government had previously put the death toll countrywide at 351 before increasing it today to 3,939. The radio station broadcasting from the country’s capital, Naypyitaw, said that 2,879 more people are unaccounted for in a single town, Bogalay, in the country’s low-lying Irrawaddy River delta area where the storm wreaked the most havoc. The situation in the countryside remained unclear because of poor communications and roads left impassable by the storm. “It’s clear that we’re dealing with a very serious situation. The full extent of the impact and needs will require an extensive on-the-ground assessment,” said Richard Horsey, a spokesman in Bangkok, Thailand for United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. “What is clear at this point is that there are several hundred thousands of people in dire need of shelter and clean drinking water,” Horsey said. At a meeting with foreign diplomats and representatives of U.N. and international aid agencies, Myanmar’s foreign ministry officials said they welcomed international humanitarian assistance and urgently need roofing materials, plastic sheets and temporary tents, medicine, water purifying tablets, blankets and mosquito nets. Neighboring Thailand announced that it would fly some aid in Tuesday. Older citizens said they had never seen Yangon, a city of some 6.5 million, so devastated in their lifetimes.
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