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home/ap news/ap news 05.14/

 

Ohio A.G. offers to resign, then vows to stay


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YANGON, Myanmar (AP) — Another powerful storm headed toward Myanmar’s cyclone-devastated delta on today and the U.N. warned that inadequate relief efforts could lead to a second wave of deaths among the estimated 2 million survivors.

The country’s junta told visiting Thai Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej, however, that it is in control of the relief operations and doesn’t need foreign experts.

Samak visited a government relief center in Yangon and told reporters after returning to Bangkok that the junta has given him the “guarantee” that there are no disease outbreaks and no starvation among the cyclone survivors.

“They have their own team to cope with the situation,” Samak said, citing Myanmar Prime Minister Lt. Gen. Thein Sein. “From what I have seen I am impressed with their management.”

International agencies say bottlenecks, poor logistics, limited infrastructure and the military government’s refusal to allow foreign aid workers have left most of the delta’s survivors living in miserable conditions without food or clean water. The government’s efforts have been criticized as woefully slow.

The U.S. military’s Joint Typhoon Warning Center said there is a good chance that “a significant tropical cyclone” will form within the next 24 hours and head across the Irrawaddy delta area.

The area was pulverized by Cyclone Nargis on May 3, leaving at least 34,273 dead and 27,838 missing, according to the government. The U.N. says the death toll could exceed 100,000.

 

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