mandag den 1. november 2010

The natural disaster you never heard of

Okay, so first of all – a little update on how you really define a cyclone, in case the phrase puzzles you as much as it did us: Tropical cyclones are very powerful tropical storms that take their beginning above seas with a temperature exceeding +26,5 Celsius degrees. The heat arises, while cold air is being dragged in from below. BIG thunderclouds are formed around the eye of the cyclone (the eye of the cyclone is completely windless, but around it the speed of the winds can exceed 250 km/h!). When moving over a sea the cyclone can create enormous waves, and when the cyclone reaches land the waves can cause floods and destroy areas.

This is exactly what hit Burma the 2nd of May 2008. The devastations were massive, and as described big areas were flooded. It was estimated that up to 100.000 Burmese people died.
The government guarded the infected areas, and some of the areas that were in the worst condition were not getting the help they need by the government, which made the monks help instead.
People were afraid of the government. Thitinan Pongsudhirak, who is the director of the Institute of Security and International Studies, said: “A lot of people had some hopes, some dreams, speculations about a broad-based uprising, that Nargis would be the beginning of the end of the military. I think the opposite is taking place.”
People were weakened and couldn’t fight the government and to make things worse: The 22nd of October 2010 cyclone Giri struck western Burma!
It is still too early, though, to know what access international staff will have to the hardest-hit-areas – but what do you think? Will Burma have learned by now? Will the government stop censoring their country and accept help? And will the people be ready to fight?
If you are wondering why you weren’t bombed with information about this cyclone from the Medias back in 2008, you aren’t the only one. Why wasn’t it blown into gigantic proportions like when the tsunami hit Thailand in 2004?
After what you’ve read in our previous posts, it will probably not surprise you that is has to do with the Burmese government and the military regime.
The Burmese government confiscated the help coming from other countries, giving the reason that they wanted to distribute the food, clothes and so on themselves – most of the things from the aid-organizations ended up in stocks in the airport, and the General Secretary from FN, Ban Ki-moon, tried to convince the Burmese government that passivity could end up killing a lot of people.
Eventually some aid-organizations were allowed to go into areas that had been hit by the cyclone, which was really great, because people were missing clean drinking water, plastic for tents and clothes – the Burmese people actually started taking clothes from the dead, and the aid-organizations became aware that they would have to remove the corpses to avoid diseases spreading.
The government wasn’t too happy about the aid-organizations and they would check the volunteers' background and so on, and if they turned out to be members of any political party, they government would take them away and they would be put into prison – so being a volunteer was definitely not a safe job.

1 kommentar:

  1. Hi. It's quite depressing to read. I wonder where you got all that information from, especially since the freedom of speech is very restricted. And, by the way, I think it is a bit hard to understand what you write about cyklons. Maybe it would help me if you could provide your explanation with some figures. And then I simply can't understand where all the energy in the cyclon comes from. Has it to do with the temperature of the sea?
    In the end I'm still gratefull to read the informations you have found. It's much easier than to be forced to find them myself.
    Best regards from Ellen

    SvarSlet