Politics | 05/22/2008 11:51 am
The Aftermath of the Cyclone in Burma (Warning: graphic photos)

‘wOw Friend’ Adelle Lutz, an artist and Burma activist, reports from Mae Sot, Thailand, on the Thailand/Burma border. The photos below were taken in the Irrawaddy Delta with local cell phones.
I came to Thailand to volunteer in the Cyclone Nargis relief work. Since I arrived in Bangkok, the numbers of Burmese at risk in the aftermath of the disaster has more than doubled. Johns Hopkins Center for Refugee and Disaster Response and the Center for Public Health and Human Rights said 1.5 million and then 2.5 million and is now reporting 3.2 million in jeopardy. At press briefings we are reminded that new information keeps coming out and to bear in mind that "the situation is fluid." How macabre and cruel. Yes, "fluid "is the defining word.
This is what I am learning — picture the Irrawaddy Delta, known as the “rice bowl of Burma,” spreading across the southernmost end of the country. The cyclone hit on May 2nd and devastated 82,000 square kilometers. For 10 hours, winds of 100 miles per hour ripped clothing as sand, debris and salt of the sea beat backs to bloody rawness. Estimates of dead and missing run from 128,000 to 220,000 with the numbers rising daily. Bodies float — not only human but also carcasses of animals. Survivors have patched together shelters from available palm fronds and bamboo.

Roads in the delta region were never the main avenues of transportation, as most used the waterways. Tributaries and paths would be revealed with the rising and falling of the tides. But the storm brought 12-foot rolling waves, one after the other, surging up to 20 kilometers inland. Fishing and transport boats were carried on top of each other and are now in pieces — pummeled into useless heaps. Gone, too, are most of the little bridges connecting the narrow roads and paths. The bodies float. Trees have toppled and many are submerged, invisible and ready to claw holes into unsuspecting boats that dare to carry meager but necessary relief. The rice is now moldy, the bodies float, the wounds are festering, the young ones have diarrhea, the mothers with newborns cannot produce breast milk, as they themselves have had little if any nourishment, and cholera is reported.

"Why not move the bodies out of the water?" I wonder. Well, where is it dry? Ah, nowhere. The grounds are saturated and now the rains have hit again and are predicted to drop another 12 centimeters of punishing water in the next five days. The UN spokesperson predicted that these rains will collapse those fragile, life-protecting shelters. But wait — weren’t we told earlier that people were congregating in the monasteries where the floors were more stable even if the roofs had fallen in? Yes. But the situation is fluid. The military has sent them home. What home? There is no home. If people congregate with those conniving monks, they might drum up some plans. And so they must go out into the open air.
Forty percent of the 3.2 million at risk (aka the "second wave") are children. But all are equal in nature’s eyes. That is the one democratic aspect of Burma — nature.






















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