logo
UN urges aid to Myanmar quake survivors before monsoons hit

UN urges aid to Myanmar quake survivors before monsoons hit

Dubai Eye02-04-2025

United Nations officials who surveyed earthquake damage in Myanmar urged the global community to ramp up aid before the looming monsoon season worsens already catastrophic conditions, with the death toll at 2,719 and expected to surpass 3,000.
Drinking water, hygiene, food, shelter and medicine are the most critical needs following extensive damage to buildings, roads and bridges, said Marcoluigi Corsi, acting humanitarian and resident coordinator following a two-day visit.
"We remain, of course, deeply committed to reaching people in Myanmar who need aid," UN spokesperson Stephane Dujarric said. "And we must act swiftly to provide relief before the upcoming monsoon season, which, of course, will even worsen this horrendous crisis."
A civil war in Myanmar had displaced more than three million people long before the quake struck. UN Special Envoy for Myanmar Julie Bishop urged all sides to immediately cease fire, permit humanitarian access and ensure aid workers are safe. "Continuing military operations in disaster-affected areas risks further loss of life," she said in the statement.
Aid groups in Myanmar warned that the window to find survivors was closing fast.
Myanmar's military ruler Min Aung Hlaing said the death toll from Friday's 7.7 magnitude quake reached 2,719 as of Tuesday morning and was expected to surpass 3,000. Some 4,521 people were injured and 441 missing.
"Among the missing, most are assumed to be dead. There is a narrow chance for them to remain alive," he said in a speech.
The quake, which struck at lunchtime on Friday, was the strongest to hit the Southeast Asian country in more than a century. It toppled ancient pagodas and modern buildings alike and inflicted significant damage on Myanmar's second city Mandalay and Naypyitaw, the capital the previous junta purpose-built to be an impregnable fortress.
UN agencies said hospitals were overwhelmed and rescue efforts hindered by infrastructure damage and the civil war. Rebels have accused the military of conducting airstrikes even after the quake and on Tuesday a major rebel alliance declared a unilateral ceasefire to help relief efforts.
The earthquake was the latest in a succession of blows for the impoverished country of 53 million people following a 2021 coup that returned the military to power and devastated the economy after a decade of development and tentative democracy.
Myanmar's military has been accused of widespread atrocities against civilians as it fought to quell a multi-pronged rebellion after the coup. It has dismissed the accusations as misinformation and says it is protecting the country from terrorists.
In neighbouring Thailand, the death toll from the quake rose to 21 on Tuesday, with hundreds of buildings damaged. Rescuers kept searching for life in the rubble of a collapsed skyscraper under construction in the capital Bangkok, but acknowledged time was against them.
COMMUNITIES FLATTENED
The region has been hit by five more aftershocks.
Julia Rees of the UN children's agency UNICEF said she witnessed entire communities in Myanmar that had been flattened, with immense destruction and psychological trauma.
"And yet, this crisis is still unfolding. The tremors are continuing. Search and rescue operations are ongoing. Bodies are still being pulled from the rubble," she said in a statement. "Let me be clear: the needs are massive, and they are rising by the hour. The window for life-saving response is closing."
In the Mandalay area, 50 children and two teachers were killed when their preschool collapsed, the UN humanitarian agency said.
In a rare survival story, a 63-year-old woman who was trapped for 91 hours was pulled from the rubble of a building in Naypyitaw on Tuesday in a joint rescue effort by the Myanmar fire department and teams from India, China and Russia.
Myanmar's civil war has complicated efforts to reach those injured and made homeless, including tight controls over the internet and communication networks.
The Three Brotherhood Alliance of three major rebel groups at war with the junta on Tuesday declared a unilateral one-month ceasefire, to allow urgent humanitarian efforts to "be carried out as swiftly and effectively as possible".
In its nightly news bulletin on Tuesday, state-controlled MRTV quoted Min Aung Hlaing as saying the military had halted its offensives but unspecified ethnic minority armies were planning to exploit the disaster. "The military is aware they are gathering, training and preparing to attack," it said, quoting the general as saying at an event to raise funds for quake victims. "We consider it as attacking us and will respond accordingly."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Mozambique: Spiralling hunger crisis and violence amid collapsing aid budgets
Mozambique: Spiralling hunger crisis and violence amid collapsing aid budgets

Zawya

time5 hours ago

  • Zawya

Mozambique: Spiralling hunger crisis and violence amid collapsing aid budgets

In a visit to the neglected crisis raging in the north of Mozambique, Egeland described it as at a 'critical tipping point,' sounding the alarm over skyrocketing violence, the devastation from multiple cyclones, and the near collapse of aid lifelines due to global funding cuts. 'In a region suffering from daily atrocities and monthly disasters, I have seen the human toll caused by the global retreat of solidarity and funding. Climate shocks, increasing violence, and spiralling hunger are having a terrible impact on the population. They now stand at the edge of an abyss, with immense suffering ahead unless the world ends its neglect,' said Egeland. Armed attacks in Cabo Delgado surged by 155 per cent in March alone, with 52 atrocities resulting in 153 abductions and 39 killings. The violence has displaced over 1.4 million people to date, while more than 600,000 others who have returned home now face renewed insecurity and little to no assistance. Simultaneously, three consecutive cyclones—Chido, Dikeledi, and Jude—have battered Mozambique in just three months, affecting more than 1.4 million people, and destroying homes, schools, health centres and farmland across several provinces. The compounded crises have pushed nearly five million Mozambicans into critical levels of hunger, with over 900,000 facing emergency conditions—just one step below famine. 'Hunger took hold in Mozambique the moment conflict did,' Egeland said. 'Where bullets fly, crops wither, supply chains collapse, and families are left hungry.' In conflict-hit Cabo Delgado, farming and markets have collapsed; in Nampula and Zambezia, cyclone-damaged crops have left families struggling to survive. Fuel shortages, infrastructure damage, and insecurity are now paralysing aid operations across the country. Humanitarian agencies, including NRC, have been forced to reduce life-saving activities due to lack of funds and growing access challenges, including administrative and bureaucratic restrictions, attacks and ambushes on aid convoys. 'In 2024, we reached over 125,000 people, but the scale of this crisis far outstrips our current capacity,' Egeland said. 'We have been forced to drastically reduce our first line response—such as survival kits and shelters to people left homeless by the latest cyclone—because of the US funding cuts.' The World Food Programme has already halved its assistance, reaching only 520,000 people of the one million targeted in 2024. This year, the number of people receiving food aid is expected to plummet even further to just 250,000, despite the growing number of people in need. 'Mothers I met told me they don't know who they would turn to if we had to stop helping them,' Egeland said. 'They've already had to cut down on their food, and their children are sleeping hungry. I want to be clear that, whatever happens, we are here to stay and deliver, and we must find a way to keep delivering in a world of chaos. 'I call on governments and the private sector to urgently mobilise funding, guarantee safe access for aid workers, and commit to long-term support for the rights and dignity of displaced Mozambicans. Several governments and multinational corporations are in Mozambique for its natural resources, with little returns to the impoverished population.' NRC stresses the need for immediate and sustained international action to avert a full-scale famine, restore food security, and support the country's fragile recovery. This includes urgent investment in agricultural recovery and fisheries support for coastal areas, nutrition for children, and protection for people forced to flee violence. 'Turning our backs now is not an option—for the sake of millions facing starvation, and for our shared humanity,' Egeland said. Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC).

Antonio Guterres: We need a rescue plan for sustainable development
Antonio Guterres: We need a rescue plan for sustainable development

The National

time21 hours ago

  • The National

Antonio Guterres: We need a rescue plan for sustainable development

This month, leaders will gather in Sevilla, Spain, on a rescue mission: to help fix how the world invests in sustainable development. The stakes could not be higher. A decade after the adoption of the Sustainable Development Goals and many global commitments to finance them, two thirds of the targets are lagging. And the world is falling short by over $4 trillion annually in the resources developing countries need to deliver on these promises by 2030. Meanwhile, the global economy is slowing, trade tensions are rising and aid budgets are being slashed while military spending soars and international co-operation is under unprecedented strain. The global development crisis is not abstract. It is measured in families going to bed hungry, children going unvaccinated, girls being forced to drop out of school and entire communities deprived of basic services. We must correct course. That begins at the Fourth International Conference on Financing for Development in Sevilla, where an ambitious, globally supported plan to invest in the Sustainable Development Goals must be adopted. That plan should include three essential elements. First, Sevilla must help accelerate the flow of resources to the countries who need it most. Fast. Countries must be in the driver's seat, mobilising domestic resources by strengthening revenue collection and addressing tax evasion, money laundering and illicit financial flows through international co-operation. This would provide much-needed resources to prioritise spending on areas with the greatest impact such as education, health care, jobs, social protection, food security and renewable energy. At the same time, national development banks, regional and Multilateral Development Banks need to come together to finance major investments. To support this, the lending capacity of these banks needs to triple so developing countries can better access capital on affordable terms with longer timelines. This increased access should include re-channeling of unconditional reserve assets – or Special Drawing Rights – to developing countries, preferably through Multilateral Development Banks to multiply their impact. A decade after the adoption of the Sustainable Development Goals and many global commitments to finance them, two-thirds of the targets are lagging Private investment is also essential. Resources can be unlocked by making it easier for private finance to support bankable development projects and by promoting solutions that mitigate currency risks and combine public and private finance more effectively. Throughout, donors must keep their development promises. Second, we must fix the global debt system. It is unfair and broken. The current borrowing system is unsustainable, and developing countries have little confidence in it. It's easy to see why. Debt service is a steamroller crushing development gains, to the tune of more than $1.4 trillion a year. Many governments are forced to spend more on debt payments than on essentials like health and education combined. Sevilla must result in concrete steps to reduce borrowing costs, facilitate timely debt restructuring for countries burdened by unsustainable debt, and prevent debt crises from unfolding in the first place. In advance of the conference, a number of countries put forward proposals to ease the debt burden on developing countries. This includes making it easier to pause debt service in times of emergency; establishing a single debt registry to strengthen transparency; and improving how the IMF, World Bank and credit-ratings agencies assess risks in developing countries. Finally, Sevilla must raise the voice and influence of developing countries in the international financial system so it better serves their needs. International financial institutions must reform their governance structures to enable greater voice and participation of developing countries in the management of the institutions they depend on. The world also needs a fairer global tax system, one shaped by all governments – not just the wealthiest and most powerful. The creation of a 'borrowers club' for countries to coordinate their approaches and learn from one another is another promising step toward addressing power imbalances. The meeting in Sevilla is not about charity. It's about justice, and building a future in which countries can thrive, build, trade and prosper together. In our increasingly interconnected world, a future of haves and have-nots is a recipe for even greater global insecurity that will keep weighing down progress for all. With renewed global commitment and action, Sevilla can spark new momentum to restore a measure of faith in international co-operation and deliver on sustainable development for people and planet.

UN peacekeepers clash with locals in southern Lebanon
UN peacekeepers clash with locals in southern Lebanon

The National

time21 hours ago

  • The National

UN peacekeepers clash with locals in southern Lebanon

UN peacekeepers said they were attacked in southern Lebanon on Tuesday, with Prime Minister Nawaf Salam saying such incidents 'endanger the security and stability' of the region. The UN peacekeeping mission (Unifil) said a patrol, which had been co-ordinated with the Lebanese Army, was confronted by people throwing rocks in the vicinity of Hallusiyat Al Tahta. A video posted online showed a Finnish peacekeeper being slapped by one of the group. 'The group attempted to obstruct the patrol using aggressive means, including throwing stones at the peacekeepers. One peacekeeper was struck, fortunately, no injuries were reported,' Unifil said. 'In response, Unifil personnel employed non-lethal measures to ensure the safety of both the patrol members and those present,' it added. The situation was defused when the Lebanese army intervened, allowing the peacekeeping force to continue its patrol, Unifil said. 'It is unacceptable that Unifil peacekeepers continue to be targeted,' it added. Unifil is part of a five-member committee to supervise the ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah, the Lebanese armed group and political party. Mr Salam condemned the 'repeated attacks' against Unifil, saying 'these actions endanger the security and stability of southern Lebanon and its people and endanger the national interest'. The past weeks saw several confrontations between residents of southern Lebanon and members of Unifil. They are typically defused by the Lebanese army and rarely escalate. Last year's ceasefire agreement states that only Lebanese troops and UN peacekeepers may be posted in the country's south, which is traditionally a stronghold of Hezbollah. Israel was supposed to fully withdraw its troops from Lebanon according to the deal, but instead continues to bomb southern Lebanon daily and occupy five points of Lebanese territory. Israeli media reported at the weekend that Israel and the US had agreed to end its mandate, which is renewed annually by the UN Security Council. Officials in Washington and Lebanon told The National that the reports were incorrect. Mr Salam said Lebanon was keen to renew Unifil's mandate in order to ensure 'that security and stability are maintained on the southern border'. Unifil peacekeepers were posted in 1978 after Israel invaded southern Lebanon, and the force is tasked with monitoring breaches from both sides of the border. Its area of operations extends from the Blue Line – the UN-delineated border between Lebanon and Israel – to the Litani River, about 30km from the border.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store