Cyclone Nargis Update

 

May 28, 2008

 

Note: New content has been inserted in red, italicized, bold font.

 

Current Status

 

Tropical Cyclone Nargis struck southwestern Myanmar (Burma) around 16:00 local time on May 2 with sustained winds of 120 mph (190 kph) and causing widespread damage to buildings, infrastructure and swaths of farmland. The official death toll remained at 77,738 Wednesday (May 28), with 55,917 reported missing. The Red Cross estimates the final figure could be as high as 127,990. Yangon (Rangoon), Irrawaddy (Ayeyarwady) Division, Pegu (Bago) Division, Karen (Kayin) state and Mon state have all been declared disaster zones. The UN estimates 2.4 million people were affected by Nargis, most in the Irrawaddy Delta region. However, most of the 1,017,000 who have been reached live in Yangon Division.

 

The UN Flash Appeal stands at US$201 million. Thirty-eight percent has been contributed so far, including US$22.4 million from the UN Central Emergency Response Fund. While OCHAs Financial Tracking System (FTS) indicates that 38.5 percent of the appeal has been met, OCHA chief John Holmes said Tuesday that about 60 percent – around US$119 million – had been raised. Overall, FTS says US$138.1 million has been committed to relief operations, with a further US$106.2 pledged. The junta has requested US$11.7 billion in foreign aid, and Holmes said that once the response shifts from relief to reconstruction, the amount of money needed will climb into the billions. (Reuters, May 27)

 

Relief worker access to the hardest hit Irrawaddy Delta continues to improve. The government approved all 45 remaining visa requests for UN agencies Wednesday and NGOs also report a significant increase in visa approval. (OCHA, May 28) Myanmars state-run media reported Wednesday that individual volunteers are free to travel into cyclone-devastated regions to give donations, although the junta urges donors to avoid unsystematic donations and acts that may tarnish the image of the nation and its people. A World Food Program spokesperson said more than 200 international staff are now in Myanmar working with the UN and there have been no reports of major problems when workers attempt to access the delta. (AFP, May 28) He said the military requires aid workers to give 48 hours notice before traveling into the delta. (IHT, May 28) Several countries and agencies have lent aircraft to the UN for faster distribution to the delta. UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon says the relief operation will last at least six months.

 

Amid reports of a more transparent relief system, there have been a few reports of donors encountering problems. The junta has reportedly set up road blocks to keep people from driving through areas where thousands of survivors have gathered beside roads to beg for assistance. (AFP, May 28). Also, there have been reports of peoples cars being impounded as they returned from hard-hit areas, allegedly as punishment for feeding beggars. (Mizzima, May 27)

 

The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), which has taken a key role in the response to Nargis, will re-deploy its Emergency Rapid Assessment Team (ERAT) for an in-depth assessment of recovery needs beginning June 1. An ASEAN field office has been set up in the main city, Yangon. (ASEAN, May 27)

 

The Early Recovery cluster and other sectors have agreed to develop and coordinate early recovery operations within each cluster. (OCHA, May 28)

 

International leaders say the juntas decision to extend by one year the detention of Myanmar pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi will not affect donations or relief work. (AFP, May 28)

 

With the rainy season about to begin, aid groups fear the spread of diarrheal diseases like cholera and dysentery will be exacerbated. The diseases were endemic in Myanmar before the cyclone, but the World Health Organization says there are no accurate figures about the rate of infection. (IRIN, May 27)


Impact

 

The official death toll remains at 77,738 with 55,917 reported missing. State media reports 19,359 people are injured. The majority of deaths were reportedly caused by the 12-foot (3.5-meter) tidal wave (storm surge). About 21.5 million people out of Myanmars 53-million population live in the five regions that have been declared disaster zones – Yangon, Irrawaddy Division, Pegu (Bago) Division, Karen (Kayin) state and Mon state.

 

About 2.4 million people were affected by Nargis, including 75 percent of people (1.4 million) in the Irrawaddy Delta region that includes the townships of Bogalay (Bogale), Labutta, Ngaputaw, Dedaye, Pyapon, Kyaiklat and Mawlamyinegyun, and about 680,000 in severely affected areas of Yangon.

 

Myanmars Foreign Ministry says losses from the cyclone are expected to exceed US$10 billion and has asked for US$11.7 billion in aid. Several sources report 95 percent of structures in the delta were destroyed. In Bogalay an estimated 10,000 people died. There are about 400 villages in Bogalay Township and the UN says that 95 percent of the township was destroyed by the storm. (Irrawaddy, May 24) The IFRC reported Monday that at least 1.5 million people remain homeless in the delta. (AP, May 26) About 110,000 people are living in temporary settlements in 14 townships.

 

Widespread destruction and lack of running water could yield epidemics of food- and water-borne diseases such as cholera and diarrhea. Health officials say water-borne diseases are within normal levels for this time of year, but the World Health Organization says it doesnt yet have a clear picture of the health situation in the worst-affected areas.

 

About 2.3 percent of Myanmars annual rice crop was lost in the storm. With monsoon rains arriving, Myanmars main planting season, which began at the beginning of May and would normally wrap up five to seven weeks from now, could be disrupted, threatening the main November rice harvest and requiring food assistance for months. The five worst-hit states produce 65 percent of the countrys rice, roughly half of poultry and 40 percent of pigs. More than 1 million acres of farmland were flooded. About 280,000 cattle used for plowing died. (AFP, May 28)

 

Myanmars Ministry of Education says 3,000 primary schools were destroyed or damaged, affecting 500,000 children. UNICEF says children account for 40 percent of the hardest-hit population and are the most likely to die in disease outbreaks. Children who have lost homes and families are now vulnerable to exploitation, child soldier recruitment and trafficking. UNICEF says 1 million children need urgent assistance.

 

Response Coordination

 

Myanmars government is coordinating disaster response with the UN Resident Coordinator and the cluster system established by the UN Disaster Management Team and Inter-Agency Standing Committee (IASC). Myanmars Ministry of Social Welfare, Relief and Resettlement is in charge of national relief efforts, with the Information Management Unit (MIMU) taking the lead in information management.

 

Myanmars Deputy Foreign Minister is designated officer for relief assistance and the Ministry of Revenue and Finance is the contact point for cargo arrival. A Ministry of Health team is working out of Yangon General Hospital to coordinate health response.

 

Most aid delivery is through national and community-based NGOs. The Myanmar Red Cross Society is the key agency. The IASCs Humanitarian Country Team has started prioritizing movement of relief goods to affected areas based on need. The top priorities are shelter, food, water and sanitation, and health. (OCHA, May 24)

 

ASEAN will lead a two-tier mechanism for coordinating and monitoring international assistance. The first (policy) tier will be a Task Force headed by ASEANs secretary-general including two representatives from each of the 10 member nations. OCHA will hold permanent advisory status and the group will meet as required. The second (operational) tier will be the Tripartite Core Group (TCG), chaired by the government of Myanmar, which will have three representatives each from the junta (lead by the deputy foreign minister), ASEAN (led by the Thai ambassador to Myanmar and the UN (led by the Humanitarian Coordinator). (OCHA, May 28) The TCG will meet two to three times a week.

 

The Early Recovery cluster and other sectors have agreed to develop and coordinate early recovery operations within each cluster. (OCHA, May 28)

 

National UN liaison officers stationed in government facilities work with the national Disaster Management Teams to assist coordination, planning and information sharing.

 

Myanmars Emergency Supply Supervisory Committee is working with UN agencies and INGOs to ensure all relief funds and supplies go to storm victims.

 

While a coordination center is operational in Labutta, four more are opening in Bogalay, Pyapon, Mawlamyinegyun and Pathein.

 

OCHA has launched a Humanitarian Information Center (HIC) Web site for Myanmar at http://myanmar.humanitarianinfo.org to improve collaboration between agencies and has also set up an On-Site Operations Coordination Center (OSOCC).

 

 

 


                                                                 Sector Status

Logistics

WFP is the lead of the logistics cluster and is supported by the UNJLC.

 

Coordinated In-Country Response: (For detailed Situation Reports for each cluster please check the HIC website: http://myanmar.humanitarianinfo.org/ )

 

Yangon Airport remains the primary hub. The template for all procedures is available at http://www.logcluster.org/mm08a.

 

Today (May 28), the Government of Myanmar approved all remaining visa requests (45) for various UN agencies. (OCHA, May 28) UN Secretary-General Ban met with Sen. Gen. Than Shwe on May 23 and the junta leader agreed to allow all aid workers into Myanmar. Three international staff from Save the Children were authorized to travel May 27 to the affected areas. Mdecins sans Frontires Switzerland has received permission for 8 international staff to travel to affected areas. UNICEF reported it had received permission for 6 international staff to travel to the delta. (OCHA, May 27)

 

Air-bridge flights from Bangkoks Don Muang (former international) Airport to Yangon are now underway daily as the main staging area for foreign relief to Myanmar. The operations hub is managed by WFP. The Cluster has secured the use of the hub for 3 months. The UN has chartered three planes to carry the aid into Myanmar. Currently, one Ilyushin 76 and two Antonov 12s will serve the air bridge. The capacity can be increased quickly if required. (WFP, May 27)

 

UN says flights are currently arriving at the rate of around 10-15 per day, and these still need to be stepped up further to meet the need. (OCHA, May 26)

 

The British Red Cross sent an emergency logistics flight carrying two 4x4 vehicles, a forklift truck and warehouse tent to help speed distribution of aid at Yangon airport. (BRC, May 28)

 

According to DFID, officials say that relief supplies on board US and UK ships can be received into port of Yangon only if transported by small local boats. (DFID, May 27)

 

To date the following items are stocked in the interagency warehouse in Yangon: Shelter: 105 MT, WASH: 1.5 MT, Education: 4 MT, Health: 1.9 MT, Logistics Support Equipment: 11 MT. (LC, May 27)

 

The Logistics Cluster in Myanmar is offering five types of services to the UN and NGOs: 1) Air cargo facilitation, 2) Temporary storage facilities, 3) Common transport service, 4) Logistics hubs and 5) Logistics information management. (UNJLC, May 26)

 

ASEAN has agreed to lead the international assistance effort. ASEAN has established a mechanism to coordinate assistance into Myanmar. A Core Group chaired by the government and also comprised of the UN and ASEAN, will deal with operational issues regarding international assistance. An ASEAN Emergency Rapid Assessment Team (ERAT) in collaboration with the UN, has been working on assessments. (WHO, May 26) The leads of the Tripartite Core Group have been identified as follows: for the GoM the Deputy Foreign Minister, from ASEAN the Thai Ambassador to Myanmar, and from the UN the Humanitarian Coordinator. (OCHA, May 28)

 

Support to the national authorities is being strengthened through the increased participation of government representatives in the cluster. Formal invitations from the Clusters to relevant line ministries and authorities have been sent and favorably received. (OCHA, May 27)

 

Based on available assessments, 2.4 million people are estimated to have been affected in the 40 most-affected townships (including urban Yangon townships). Of the 2.4 million people affected, an estimated 1,017,000 (42%) people have been reached with some kind of relief support to date, through the combined efforts of MRCS (96,000), UN and INGOs (793,000), and local NGOs and civil society groups (128,000). However, the majority of this assistance has been delivered to people living in Yangon Division. Of the estimated 2 million people in the 15 worst-affected townships, it is estimated that only 470,000 (23%) have been reached. (OCHA, May 24)

 

The logistics cluster is now operating a 4,000 square meter warehouse in Yangon (managed by DHL), along with a fleet of 30 trucks, four barges (200-800 MT) with four barge pushers (total capacity = 2,150 tons), and two boats (300 and 600 MT). One jetty has been identified in Yangon.

 

UN using four barges to distribute goods from Yangon to the delta. Transit time is between 3 and 6 days. Each can carry some 700 tons. (DFID, May 26) Cluster says barge operation proceeding well, with 983 tons moved on May 25. (LC, May 27)

 

A barge left for Labutta carrying 33 MT of NFIs for MERLIN, 100 tons of pulses, 19 MT of biscuits, 5 MT empty bags for WFP and 7 MT of logistics support equipment. (LC, May 28) A boat will load 56 MT of NFIs for Pyapon, Bogale and Setsan on May 29.

 

The cluster has identified 20 small boats that can be rented: 10 with 2 MT capacity and 10 with 1 MT capacity. The boats are currently based in Pathein but can be sent to Labutta and Bogalay. (LC, May 27)

 

Cluster says port in Yangon is operational but there is no container offloading equipment, although there is container handling equipment (container and forklifts) on ground. (LC, May 27)

 

Logistics hubs storage updates:

Mawlanyaingyun:location identified. 2,500 tons available in MAPT w/h.

Labutta 7 Mobile Storage Units (MSUs) (1 dedicated to UNICEF and 4 to WFP). All heavy cargo moving by barge. 1,840 sqm (140sqm for UNICEF, 1,120 for WFP, 480 available)

Pathein: 4 units of 400 MT each

Pyapon: 2 MSUs up, 150 pallets received. Easily accessible by truck. (480 sqm)

Bogalay: 2 MSUs up (1 for UNICEF use). 480 sqm (240 sqm dedicated to UNICEF) 720 sqm under construction. (UNJLC, May 28)

 

Cluster says hubs are moving slowly because of lack of personnel to set up assets. Places identified are crammed as government using for landing zones for helicopters or for camps. (LC, May 27)

 

Myanmar has allowed 10 WFP helicopters to deliver emergency supplies, capable of carrying 3 MT of relief into the delta. Canada will deliver up to five helicopters to Myanmar via Bangkok. One helicopter in Yangon is now cleared for use. (WFP, May 27) The Royal Australian Air Force has delivered two helicopters to the UN in Thailand to be used by the WFP. (ABC, May 28)

 

The fleet of trucks is set up at the inter agency warehouse set up by the cluster. The fleet consists of: 5 trucks of ten feet capacity, 10 trucks of 14 feet capacity, 10 trucks of 22 feet capacity and 5 trucks of 32 feet capacity. (UNJLC, May 26)

 

Heavy rains are continuing and the conditions for road transportation remain poor in delta areas. UN cautions that roads affected by the cyclone will deteriorate as monsoon rains increase. The NGO Concern says 70 percent of the roads are now accessible again. (Concern, May 27)

 

The 22-mile long road from Pyapon to Bogalay is narrow and in poor condition. Trucks carrying relief cargos were recommended not to travel at night. Main road from Yangon to Pathein is in good condition. The Kyayklat – Bogalay and the Myaungmya – Labutta roads are in poor condition. Bridges on the road to Labutta are reported to be in bad condition and only passable for maximum 12 ton trucks. (LC, May 26) Road conditions are difficult, the 22 miles from Pyapon took 1.5 hours. Max weight on bridges is 7 tons. Barge operation considered better option for this stretch. (LC, May 27)

 

World Vision reported the following traveling times:

Yangon – Kyaiklat: 3 hours by road

Yangon – Bogalay: 4.5 hours by road

Yangon – Pyapon: 3.5 hours by road

Pyapon –Mawlamyinegyun: 1.5 hours from Pyapon by river by boat

 

Food

WFPs Emergency Operation for Myanmar with a budget of US$69.5 million aims to deliver a complete food basket to a total of 750,000 people in need of immediate food assistance. So far, WFP's operation has received US$21.3 million in confirmed contributions, including over US$5 million from the UNs CERF. (OCHA, May 28)

 

Thus far, WFP has dispatched food to eight townships in and around Yangon and eight (Bogalay, Labutta, Pyapon, Kyaiklat, Maubin, Ngaputaw, Dedaye and Pathein) in the Irrawaddy delta. (WFP, May 27)

 

The Cluster estimates that monthly food requirement is approximately 8,933 tons. The Cluster estimates now that it has reached approximately 483,000 beneficiaries with varying rations (aim to reach 750,000 people). WFP plans to cover 11 townships in Irrawaddy and 8 townships in Yangon for its emergency response. Reports from NGOs from remote areas have not been received; therefore the beneficiary numbers are not precise. (OCHA, May 28)

 

Based on key events over the past several days WFP is presently working under the following planning assumptions:

Full and unhindered access to affected areas by both national and international staff;

Permission to source required commodities under the EMOP;

Needed authorizations from line ministries will be forthcoming;

Logistics capacity to move goods and people to the places where they are needed;

Confidence that funds for our operations will be available;

Availability of NGO partners who will operate within our standards both building on existing relationships and possibly new partnerships with new NGOs.

A fully secure working environment. (OCHA, May 28)

 

Importation of rice is still under negotiation with the Government. If the import permission is obtained, WFP plans to import about 15,000 tons of rice. WFP submitted a request for import permission for 318 tons of salt from Thailand to Ministry of Commerce MoC. Import permit for 2,186 tons of vegetable oil was received from MoC. Import of oil has not been a problem as Myanmar has not produced sufficient oil to meet the domestic demand The Myanmar Agriculture Produce Trade (MAPT) continued delivery of the 10,000 ton consignment of rice to WFP warehouses in the delta, as follows: Labutta: 812 tons Bogalay: 675 tons Pyapon: 386 tons Pathein: 607 tons. (OCHA, May 28)

 

WFP has now dispatched enough food to the affected areas to feed 570,000 people with a two-week ration of rice. WFP estimates that nearly 485,000 people have received a first ration of food since the cyclone struck. High-energy biscuits for over 107,000 children and ready-to-eat meals for about 2,500 people have also been dispatched. (WFP, May 27)

 

FAO says the already severe food security situation is further worsening due to food shortages and high food prices. With regular access to food disrupted, sharply rising food prices in the other parts of the country are posing a risk to food security. However, there still seems to be plenty of food available in markets outside the delta. Poor people in Myanmar spend on average 60 to 70 percent of their household budget on food, and they can not afford to buy the same quantities of food at the present high prices. (FAO, May 23)

 

To feed the 750,000 people for 3 months, as planned in the Flash Appeal, will require 55,000 MT of rice of which only 50 percent may be procured in country. (OCHA, May 21)

 

WFP emergency food assistance rations will be composed of:

Rice 400g per day per person

Pulses 100g per day per person

Vegetable oil 30g per day per person

Iodized salt 5g per day per person

The monthly relief food basket for a family of five includes 60 kg of rice, 15 kg of pulses, 4.5 kg of oil and 0.75 kg of iodized salt. High-energy biscuits are to be provided for children under five years of age. (OCHA, May 20)

The daily ration will meet a minimum daily requirement of 2,100 kilocalories, composed of rice, pulses, vegetable oil, and salt. Ready-to-eat food (e.g. high energy biscuits, rice-lentil mix and supplementary foods for young children).

 

WFP is setting up a distribution system with other partners and plans to distribute cash on a limited basis for food purchase in urban areas where markets are functioning. (WFP, May 27)

 

WFP has been able to purchase 10,000 tons of rice on the local market in Myanmar. A further 1,000 tons of beans have also been purchased in addition to 200 tons of salt. (WFP, May 27)

 

WFP is currently setting up a logistics base at Pyapon, in addition to the field offices at Labutta and Bogalay. (WFP, May 27) WFP has 37 staff currently deployed in the affected areas outside Yangon. (WFP, May 27)

 

Shelter

UNHCR is the designated lead for the shelter cluster. UNHCR will support the IFRC, which has been designated as the in-country lead for the cluster. IOM is chairing a temporary shelter working group. (IOM, May 24)

 

Out of the US$187 million Flash Appeal, UNHCR is asking for some US$6 million to help some 250,000 people with temporary shelter materials.

 

IFRC said May 26 that at least 1.5 million people remained homeless in the delta. (AP, May 26)

 

More than 170,000 people are in 310 informal shelters and government-run settlements in the 15 priority townships. (WHO, May 28)

 

Of the 2.4 million affected by Cyclone Nargis, it is estimated that 1.4 million are located in the most severely affected townships of the delta region. However, Yangon was also badly hit with some 680,000 living in severely affected areas. (OCHA, May 21) In the delta, 150,000 people are living in 120 temporary settlements. (DFID, May 22)

 

The cluster continues to target 40% of the affected population over the next four to six weeks, which will involve cluster partners delivering at maximum capacity. (OCHA, May 26)

 

The Cluster has formed a Strategic Advisory Group (SAG) with the following members: IFRC, UNHCR, UNICEF, IOM, DFID and Save the Children. The SAG is responsible for the development of strategies for shelter interventions to ensure appropriate and equitable shelter assistance. (OCHA, May 28)

 

The cluster is now working on developing a proposal for an in-depth shelter assessment. Due to previous confusion on names of the shelter kits, these have now been renamed as follows: The Family kit is now known as the Relief kit. The Shelter kit as the Tarp Kit and the Hamlet kit as the Community tool kit. The outline of the Strategic Framework of the shelter cluster specifies the following:

To assist affected households in a way that will give maximum coverage of affected families and communities within a limited time span;

To assist those affected households with Community tool kits in a way that will complement and benefit the family, the community as a first phase. The other two kits to address other needs and complement the Community toolkit;

To transition from the relief phase to the recovery phase with long term goals for the households in mind; (OCHA, May 28)

 

Shelter cluster has standardized three types of kits among partners. The first kit is primarily a tool kit. This will contain tools needed for fixing or rebuilding a shelter. This kit is to be distributed to a group of 10 or more households, to be shared among the households. The second kit is a basic building material kit and will consist of tarpaulin, rope etc. This is to be distributed one per household. The third kit will be a Non-Food Items (NFI) kit. (OCHA, May 17)

 

DFID says the first of 11 UK flights set to leave over the next nine days landed in Yangon on May 26. Each flight will carry between 9,000 and 9,500 units of plastic sheeting and blankets. Altogether it will provide shelter for 250,000 people. (DFID, May 27)

 

IOM Bangkok will receive 15,000 plastic sheet tarpaulins this week. (IOM, May 27)

 

Some residents say they were forced out of schools where they had sought shelter so that class rooms could be used as polling stations for the referendum vote. There have been other scattered reports of forcible displacement by security troops and local officials.The New Light of Myanmar reported that 9,200 displaced from 84 villages in Mawlamyinegun who were moved to camps in Wakema Township in the delta have been sent back to their villages as part of a resettlement plan.

 

An independent source estimates that 110,000 persons are living in temporary settlements in 14 townships. Of these, 70% are sheltering in monasteries, 28% in public buildings and 2% in tented official government camps. The highest numbers of homeless people in temporary settlements are in Labutta (34,000), Bogalay (15,500), Myaungmya (12,000) and Pyapon (9,700) townships in Irrawaddy, and Kungyangon township (20,000) in Yangon Division. (OCHA, May 22)

 

There are an estimated 239 temporary formal and informal settlements in the worst affected areas of Yangon and the delta region. It is important to note that the majority of temporary settlements are in Buddhist monasteries, while the minority are in tented camps. Official tented camps are in Labutta, Bogalay, Pathein, Maubin, and Myaungmya. The remainder of settlements are in other public buildings, including schools. In the Irrawaddy delta, it is estimated that 91,000 people are sheltered in settlements in their townships of origin, while 25,000 have been displaced to settlements in other townships. In such cases, movements are from Labutta to Myaungmya and Pathein, from Bogalay and Pyapon to Maubin, and from Ngaputaw to Pathein. (OCHA, May 21)

 

In Labutta, the authorities announced that there are now 12 tented relief settlements, which plan to operate for 6 months, and that all other temporary shelters in Labutta town would be closed down by 9 June. (OCHA, May 21)

 

Health

The World Health Organization (WHO) leads the health cluster, which comprises 22 international NGOS and other UN agencies. The Health Cluster has nominated Merlin as cluster co-lead. Sixteen WHO surveillance officers have been deployed to Irrawaddy and Yangon, including 11 international staff. Cluster projects submitted to the CERF amount to US$4 million. (OCHA, May 15) In the upcoming revision of the flash appeal, preliminary estimates are that the cluster will need US$28 million. (WFP, May 28)

Cluster sub-groups have been formed on HIV/AIDS, Early Recovery and psychosocial support. (WHO, May 28)

 

MoH reports that 90,000 outpatients and 10,000 inpatients have been treated in affected areas till May 18. There have been 2887 mild and 124 severe diarrhea cases. In a population of 1.5 million, approximately 200 diarrhea cases per day is within the range seen in previous years. (WHO, May 20)

 

No disease outbreaks have been confirmed to date, and investigation of outbreak rumors is ongoing. WHO Epidemiologist introduced a two-track system for early warning to the Cluster. The system relies firstly on a telephone contact point for each agency, to be contacted daily by WHO. This will be fed into the daily Situation Report. Secondly, a reporting form and case definitions were agreed and circulated to all agencies. A technical group will develop a framework for reporting. The system will include weekly reporting on Sundays with a surveillance bulletin available by Tuesday. Laboratory support for specimen collection will be established in each township, with Yangon Central Reference Laboratory providing support. (OCHA, May 27) First reports are expected next week. TB surveillance will also be re-established. (WHO, May 28)

 

Seven WHO interagency kits have arrived in Myanmar. (WHO, May 28)

 

WHO says cases of severe diarrhea and dengue hemorrhagic fever is being investigated. Along with water-borne diseases, vector-borne diseases and acute respiratory infections (ARIs) remain a concern as these are expected to increase in the rainy season. (WHO, May 28)

 

In Bogalay local coordinated efforts for the Health Cluster are successfully being developed with UNICEF, IOM, WFP, UNHCR, ACF, MSF and a local NGO. As a result, a Joint Emergency Response Mobile Operation has been established. The objectives of the joint operation are to provide multisectoral services to cyclone victims at the same time, to minimize the resources/cost and to maximize the provision of package of services/care to victims. (OCHA, May 28)

 

Pun Hlaing International Hospital is providing disaster relief and rebuilding in the delta areas of Ngaputaw and Hain-Gyi, in particular areas where little assistance has been offered and where damage has been extensive with no medical relief. A Medical Relief Team (8 doctors, 4 nurses, 1 pharmacist & 4 Gen Volunteers) left on May 21 to set up a mini hospital and mobile medical units at Thyin-Ka-Gon. This team was reinforced by a second team on May 24. The logistics are reported to be difficult since some areas are accessible only by boat. (OCHA, May 28)

 

In response to the request from MOH, WHO will provide MOH with drugs, insecticides, fogging machines, rapid diagnostic tests, and bednets for Malaria and Dengue prevention to a total of around US$ 1million. WHO is supporting IFRC and MRCS in conducting one day refresher training of Red Cross volunteers to be deployed in cyclone affected areas. The first batch, with 38 participants, is being conducted, and 9 batches will be trained on May 30 to June 10. IOM continues to have Mobile Medical teams working out of Bogalay. One team currently focuses on displaced people sheltering in temporary urban relief sites. The other three mobile teams provide medical outreach to communities in the south of Bogalay and in Mawlamyinegyun, many of which can only be reached by boats. (OCHA, May 28)

 

JICA is dispatching a 23-member Japan Disaster Relief (JDR) medical team for two weeks. The team will be based in Labutta. (JICA, May 28)

 

WHO organized a technical update on malaria and dengue fever focused on the cyclone-affected areas, with the participation of UN agencies and 12 NGOs. A joint plan of action for prevention and control of malaria and dengue is in preparation. UNICEF will supply diagnostic test kits and malaria drugs on request from NGOs. WHO shared information on malaria prophylaxis for aid workers travelling to the affected areas. (OCHA, May 27)

 

Health Cluster partners will develop an in-depth assessment tool, which will be consolidated with MOH, to complement the multi-sectoral assessment tool being developed. WHO is inviting partners to submit information for consolidation on supplies they bring. This information will improve accountability and transparency and is requested by donors. (OCHA, May 27)

 

IOM now has four medical teams working out of Bogalay and plans to build up to eight by the end of the week. (IOM, May 27) On May 26 IOM received four Zodiac inflatable boats, 2,400 10-liter jerrycans and 768 hygiene kits donated by the US. The boats will allow access to outlying settlements accessible only by water. (IOM, May 27)

 

Medical teams from more than 70 countries are expected to arrive in next 3-6 months. (WHO, May 28) Five international medical teams are providing medical care and support to national health-care staff in the affected areas of Irrawaddy and Yangon Divisions. The Thai team is in Myaungmya, the Indian team in Bogalay and Pyapon, the Chinese team in Kungyangon and Dedaye, the Bangladeshi team in Wakema and the Lao team in Kyauktan. There are now 198 health-care workers from Bangladesh, China, India, Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand. The Thai team treated more than 2500 patients in the past week. Most cases were for diarrhea, and a third of patients were children. Indonesia, Japan, Belgium will send teams in the next few days. (WHO, May 26). A 30-strong Philippines team is expected to be deployed to Pathein. (OCHA, May 24)

 

More than 2000 medical experts from the government and NGOs, plus 39,000 Red Cross and private health workers have been deployed. (WHO, May 24).

 

Mental health remains a concern. Based on WHOs experience with disasters, 30-50% of the cyclone affected population could suffer psychological distress. NGOs continue to collaborate on psychosocial issues and mental health, led by IOM. (OCHA, May 27)

 

The MoH is focusing on cross-sectoral prevention measures, such as ensuring clean water, food and shelter, to reduce the risk of disease outbreaks, as water-borne diseases routinely peak in the months of May and June. Immunization for measles and polio is ongoing in the relief shelters. Health care services are being provided by MOH staff at hospitals, in 12 relief settlements, and through mobile teams. Three medical boats with 34 doctors are now providing health services in the delta area, and 390 mobile teams are in the field to improve access to and coverage of health care. Government Health professionals are also providing services in 12 forefront, middle and rear relief camps. (WHO, May 20)

 

UNICEF currently has 12 public health professionals deployed in seven townships in Irrawaddy and seven public health professionals to eight townships in Yangon. (OCHA, May 22)

 

The national professional membership organizations the Myanmar Medical Association, Myanmar Nurse and Midwife Association and Myanmar Health Assistant Association are auxiliaries to the national response. (OCHA, May 21)

 

Myanmar health authorities are providing daily reports on disease cases from the affected townships, being provided by Divisional Health Directors to the MOH Central Epidemiological Unit (CEU). MOH has a team of high level officials working out of Yangon General Hospital responsible for planning, managing and coordinating the overall response in health. (OCHA, May 20)

 

At least 50% of health structures are damaged or destroyed and restricted access continues to hamper efforts. (OCHA, May 20)

 

There is an urgent need to provide safe delivery space within settlements for pregnant women. UNICEF is working to provide temporary safe delivery space and has already sent delivery kits to the affected townships. (OCHA, May 20)

 

WHO has supplied one emergency health kit to the Maubin Hospital, which is functioning as a referral hospital. MOH has redeployed 10 medical doctors and 12 nurses from Mandalay and Yangon General Hospital to Maubin Hospital as well as three Public Health Officers. (OCHA, May 20)

 

UNAIDS reports that all anti-retroviral therapy (ART) services are functioning and providing the necessary services to the HIV-positive community. The Myanmar Positive Group is working with local community organizations such as Phoenix group and with support from HIV/AIDS Alliance and UNDP and other organizations working with groups such as AFXB. (WHO, May 18) The National League for Democracy is also providing support to HIV/AIDS patients. (Irrawaddy, May 28)

 

The Health Cluster is supporting, with medical supplies, 200 extended first-aid posts run by doctors from the MoH and MRCS volunteers. (WHO, May 18)

 

The health cluster has established three operations centers in the townships of Pathein, Labutta and Bogalay. (WHO, May 17)

 

Nutrition

Before Nargis, the Irrawaddy region had around 30 percent chronic and 9 percent acute malnutrition rates. (OCHA, May 11)

 

Save the Children says that some 30,000 children under the age of five in affected areas were acutely malnourished before the cyclone hit, of those the NGO believes several thousand are at risk of death in the next two to three weeks due to a lack of food. (DFID, May 18)

 

Myanmar currently faces difficulties in providing adequate food to poor and vulnerable families. Despite being a food-surplus country, one-third of children remain malnourished; one-fifth are born underweight. High chronic malnutrition rates indicate a worsening of the food security situation due to insufficient nutritious food, poor access to health facilities, inadequate water and sanitation facilities, poor maternal and child care and limited livelihood opportunities. In the 2007/08 UNDP Human Development Index, Myanmar is placed 132nd out of 177 countries. (WFP, May 16)

 

Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH)

UNICEF leads the water/sanitation cluster and has launched an appeal for an initial US$8.2 million.

 

The WASH Cluster has released technical guidelines on Rainwater Harvesting (RWH) and Pond rehabilitation specifically for use in the emergency:

http://myanmar.humanitarianinfo.org/water/default.aspx

(OCHA, May 27)

 

Most of the WASH supplies needed for RWH and pond rehabilitation are available locally in the country or will be procured locally. Main supplies that are scarce in country and will have to be imported are water treatment tablets, bladders and water containers (50L). (OCHA, May 28)

 

IOM will this week receive 147 portable water purifiers. (IOM, May 27)

 

Five employees of the German Federal Agency for Technical Relief brought two water treatment plants to Bogalay. The plants are capable of purifying 6,000 liters an hour and can supply drinking water for around 20,000. (GoG, May 27)

 

An ICRC water purification unit was deployed to Dedaye on May 21, manned by five MRCS volunteers. The unit is producing 72,000 liters of water a day. (IFRC, May 27)

 

There are currently 27 mobile water treatment plants, with a total capacity of 3.288 cubic meters, that can provide clean water to approximately 1 million people. (WHO, May 26)

 

Cluster partners are distributing chlorine solution sufficient to disinfect 6 million liters of water per day. Challenges have been encountered in the construction of sanitation facilities due to high water table in the delta areas.

 

The Cluster has finalized a 4-month initial response action plan based on an assumption of 1.5 million affected people, including 0.5 million in temporary relief settlements.

 

Agencies have agreed to be WASH cluster focal points for each township. For Irrawaddy Division: Bogalay (GAA), Dedaye (CESVI), Kyaiklat (MRCS/IFRC), Labutta (Merlin), Mawlamyinegyun (MRCS), Pyapon (CDA). For Yangon Divison: Dala (AMI), Dagon (WV), Khawmu (UNICEF), Kungyangon (CDA), Seikgyikanaungto (AMI), Kyauktan (CDA), Hlaingtharyar (WV), Twantay (AMI). (OCHA, May 21)

 

The WASH cluster has finalized the recommended contents for hygiene kits, which are designed for a family of five persons for one month. Two versions of the kits are proposed, depending on whether they are to be supplied in a village setting or in more densely populated temporary settlements. (OCHA, May 26)

 

The Cluster agreed, in this phase, to adopt the following indicators: Safe drinking water: 3 liters per capita per day, Clear and fresh water (bathing, general purpose): 10 liters per day in temporary settlement settings. Latrines (or safe excreta disposal facility): 1/100 people in 60 days time, 1/50 in 90 days, 1/36 persons per day after 120 days, and thereafter at a rate of 5,000 latrines provided per month until the target of 1 latrine for 20 persons is reached. Hygiene promotion: 1 community per Hygiene Promoter per 2,000 persons in 60 days, and 1 per 500 persons in 90 days. (OCHA, May 17)

 

Agriculture

While Agriculture and Early Recovery remain separate clusters, they are collaborating doing strategic planning jointly.

 

UN emergency appeal includes US$10 million for agriculture. Actual requirements are much higher, and will be detailed and reflected in the revision of the appeal. (AP, May 24) A CERF grant of US$2 million has been approved for FAO. The project provides emergency support to restore food security in affected areas. (OCHA, May 24)

 

According to media reports, 122 power tillers, donated by the GoM and a private company, will be distributed to farmers in storm-stricken areas in Dedaye township. (OCHA, May 28)

 

The government estimates the costs of rehabilitation at US$243 million for agriculture and US$25 million for livestock. Additional resources are needed for the fishery sector for which the losses are difficult to estimate.

 

The Irrawaddy delta has an extensive fishery industry along its coast. The loss of crops, shrimp farms, fishing ponds, nursery hatcheries, fishing boats and other productive assets has led to increased unemployment of the extreme poor who depend on wage labor for their livelihood. (WFP, May 20)

 

Around 50 percent of cattle and buffalos in 10 surveyed townships perished during the storms. These livestock are essential to small rice farmers as draught animals for plowing the paddy fields. Their manure is the only source of nitrogen fertilizers used by farmers. (FAO, May 23)

 

Paddy fields intruded by sea water will need salt-tolerant rice varieties, in addition to water pumps for flushing out sea water. Land tillers are needed to repair embankments and prepare the fields for planting. (FAO, May 23)

 

UNDP Cash for Work programs are underway in the rice growing area of Kyaiklat in the Irrawaddy delta. Initial work includes clearing of ponds and land preparation to support farmers. Preparations are underway in Bogalay.

 

The Ministry of Agriculture and Irrigation reports that the current loss of rice is only 2.3% (718,400 MT) of total production in 2007/2008, although rice stored for household consumption has most likely been lost in the most affected areas. Extensive damage to land and agricultural infrastructure risks the loss of the November harvest because planting must be done within five to seven weeks. FAO has confirmed there are enough seeds for planting in-country, but fertilizer is still needed.

 

130,000 farming households were affected in Irrawaddy Division and 117,000 in Yangon Division. As the affected area is the nations granary, food security in the country and especially in the affected area is of concern. The rice planting season is beginning and the FAO estimates a need for 50,000 tons of rice and 15,000 tons of fertilizer, covering 250,000 hectares.

 

FAO has launched a new website offering a wide range of data and information tools on agriculture in Myanmar. (FAO, May 27)

Link: http://www.fao.org/nr/myanmar/myan-home_en.htm

 

FAO says nearly four-fifths of the population earns its living from the land, raising crops, livestock and fish. (FAO, May 27)

 

Protection of children and women

UNICEF leads the protection cluster.

 

Twenty Child-Friendly Spaces are now functioning in Irrawaddy and 43 in Yangon divisions. (OCHA, May-23)

 

40 percent of the affected population is estimated to be children. (UNICEF, May 26)

 

The cluster continues to advocate for the placement of separated children in interim family-like care, rather than orphanages. (OCHA, May 26)

 

The DSW asked UNICEF to help lead a national action plan for child protection in emergencies with direct involvement of DSW. A task force has been formed with representatives from DSW, UNICEF, Save the Children and World Vision. (OCHA, May 22)

 

A local NGO cluster partner re-established 870 "Caregiver Circles" in Yangon to provide integrated early childhood development, including a feeding program for more than 9,000 children aged 0-3, and provide a support mechanism for the families. (OCHA, May 21)

 

Education

UNICEF leads the education cluster.

 

On Tuesday (May 27) the Minister of Social Welfare, Relief and Resettlement travelled with the Humanitarian Coordinator, WFP Regional Director for Asia, Save the Children and representatives from other UN agencies, NGOs and donors to the affected areas in the delta. They were able to visit several locations in Labutta and Bogalay townships. During the visit the team viewed sample temporary classrooms erected by SDC. The Minister informed that school would start in July for those children in the Irrawaddy. (OCHA, May 27)

 

UNICEF met with Ministry of Education (MoE) representatives from the Departments of Education Planning and Basic Education. The impact of the disaster on teachers, and teacher shortages due to the high death toll was discussed. According to MoE, there is a surplus of teachers, and if needed, teachers from training colleges could be brought to affected areas. Prioritization of activities for the coming 3-6 months highlighted: 1) psychosocial counseling and activities for teachers and children; 2) supplies for schools and students; 3) school building repairs and reconstruction. (OCHA, May 27)

 

UNICEF reports that they have so far distributed over 5,000 roof sheets, around 100 school in a box kits, as well as 62 recreation kits, in Hlaingtharya, Kawhmu and Shwepyithar townships. (OCHA, May 28)

 

Cluster Lead UNICEF is developing a two-pager on Tips for Teachers affected by the disaster. Once this is completed and translated it will be distributed with School Kits, and to cluster partners. UNICEF has also requested a psychosocial specialist with experience in dealing with teachers. (OCHA, May 27)

 

People living in schools will be relocated to camps to ensure that the new academic year could resume on June 2 per the governments plans

 

The Ministry of Education says 3,000 primary schools were destroyed or damaged, affecting some 500,000 children. OCHA estimates some 2,400 primary schools have been damaged, affecting the education of 360,000 students. UNICEF says 85 percent of educational buildings were damaged.

 

Telecommunication

The Ministry of Social Welfare, Relief and Resettlement says no communications equipment can be imported, and as an alternative delivered to the Resident Coordinators office CDMA SIM cards and phones for sale through the Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications. A maximum of 10 units per agency are offered at a cost of US$1,500 each. (OCHA, May 22) Restriction on official imports of telecommunications equipment remains. (OCHA, May 28)

 

WFP and UNICEF continue to provide technical support to the humanitarian community in Bangkok and Yangon, and in sub-offices and logistics centers in Labutta, Bogalay and Pyapon. (OCHA, May 26) UNICEF has now completed installation of the IPSTAR system for use in Labutta. (OCHA, May-23)

 

Early Recovery

UNDP leads the early recovery cluster. UNDP has assembled a team to arrange recovery assessments from 1,700 villages. UN says the emergency appeal includes US$4.8 million for early recovery efforts. (AP, May 24)

FAO is funding part of the early assessment from own resources (US$638,000), and has received funding of US$500,000 from an Italian emergency contribution. US$16 million is under consideration by donors. (FAO, May 23)

 

An agreement has been reached between clusters and the Early Recovery cluster to institutionalize a focal point mechanism to improve coordination in formulation and implementation of Early Recovery within individual clusters. It is envisaged that these focal points would form an Early Recovery Network. (OCHA, May 28)

 

The cluster proposed inclusion of vulnerability, accessibility and community livelihood options and opportunities in plans for a rapid assessment and multi-sectoral assessment formats. A meeting of the Agriculture and ER clusters was held yesterday. The following was decided at the meeting: Agricultural inputs will be made available by FAO and made available to other agencies and organizations having delivery capacities in the field. FAO will clarify the arrangement of the on-going results of agricultural damage and needs assessments. (OCHA, May 28)

 

Early Recovery strategy will focus on two components: Immediate Activities, and Early Recovery. Immediate Activities are to organize assistance to help farming communities in the delta to prepare for the monsoon planting (early June to July). The Early Recovery component will provide a framework for a long-term recovery plan and will begin in 4-6 weeks. Planning, resource mobilization and programming will begin immediately.

 

The government has clarified that it is responsible for the rehabilitation of public buildings, but would welcome support.

 

The upcoming monsoon will exacerbate infrastructure and capacity issues.

 

 

 

Background

 

Cyclone season in the Bay of Bengal typically runs from May through November. Nargis was the first cyclone to hit the Bay since category-4 Cyclone Sidr struck Bangladesh on November 15, killing nearly 3,400 people and devastating the southeastern coastline. In May 2004, the junta made a rare request for assistance after a cyclone hit Rakhine state, killing at least 140 people and displacing around 18,000. It was reportedly the worst storm to hit Rakhine since 1968. The junta has acknowledged that Myanmar has never seen a disaster on the scale of Nargis.

 

Country Profile

 

Myanmar, formerly known as Burma, has a population of about 53 million and has been ruled by a succession of military juntas since 1962. It is one of Asia's poorest nations. The current junta, ruling since 1988, has isolated the country from the outside world, making it difficult at times to extract information about events taking place in the country. The capital city, Naypyidaw, is located about 240 miles (390 km) north of Yangon.

 

Many Western nations have imposed sanctions on Myanmar in protest of its alleged human rights abuses and a crackdown on peaceful pro-democracy protests in September 2007 in which at least 31 people were killed. Myanmar receives far less foreign aid - about $US2.50 per capita - than regional neighbors Cambodia ($47) and Laos ($63) and below the $14 average for low-income nations. (Reuters)

 

 

Government Response

 

The Ministry of Social Welfare, Relief and Resettlement heads national relief efforts.

 

Myanmar will lead and contribute three members to a Tripartite Core Group (TCG) with the UN and ASEAN that will address operational problems with aid delivery as part of a two-tier coordinating mechanism. The deputy foreign minister will lead the juntas contingent in the TCG. (OCHA, May 28)

 

The National Disaster Preparedness Central Committee (NDPCC) headed by the prime minister has mobilized military and police units for rescue, rehabilitation and clean-up operations in the Yangon area. The government has fewer than 40 helicopters and only around 15 transport planes, primarily small jets unable to carry hundreds of tons of supplies. Four infantry divisions have been deployed to affected areas. The government approved the 45 remaining visa requests for various UN agencies Wednesday. (OCHA, May 28)

 

Police are trying to clear the roads of thousands of cyclone survivors who are begging for food from passing cars. The government said relief items should be given out only at relief centers and police and soldiers have established roadblocks to question foreigners on the main route from Yangon to Dedaye following reports of relief volunteers driving to villages to deliver aid themselves amid the juntas restrictions. (AFP, May 27)

 

The junta now says school will resume in July for children in Irrawaddy Division.

 

The Ministry of National Planning and Economic Development says electricity supply to Yangon is at 59.6 percent of normal coverage, telephone is at 76.3 percent and water supply is 98.5 percent. (OCHA, May 23)

 

The junta seeks US$11.7 billion in aid. State media reports that the government has spent more than US$45.5 million (50 billion MMK) on relief operations, has finished the emergency response phase and is now in the reconstruction phase. (AP, May 20)

 

NDPCC says there are more than 2000 government and NGO medical experts and 39,000 Red Cross and private health workers deployed in affected areas. The Ministry of Health is working on cross-sectoral prevention measures and says three medical ships with 34 doctors are providing health services in the delta. Government health professionals are working in 12 relief camps. The UN World Health Organization is supporting 350 Ministry of Health rapid response and medical teams. (WHO, May 23)

 

The Emergency Supply Supervisory Committee is working with UN agencies and INGOs to ensure all relief funds and supplies go to storm victims.

 

The government provided 122 power tillers to farmers in Dedaye. (OCHA, May 28)

 

 

National Response

 

More than 100 Myanmar organizations, companies and benefactors have donated relief items. More than 40 Myanmar NGOs are participating in a local NGO Resource Center. Buddhist monks are playing a major role by housing victims in monasteries and distributing rice and shelter materials delivered by aid agencies. Local NGOs and civil society groups have reached an estimated 128,000 survivors. (OCHA, May 24)

 

The Myanmar Red Cross Society (MRCS) has more than 27,000 volunteers distributing the bulk of International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent (IFRC) supplies. MRCS is expected to receive US$4.5 million (5 billion MMK) from the government. MRCS has reached a total of 124,190 beneficiaries, 90,000 of them in Irrawaddy Division. (OCHA, May 27) MRCS has five operational assessment teams in Irrawaddy, Yangon and Pegu divisions, Mon and Kayin states. MRCS is helping UNICEF distribute supplies.

 

Metta, a national NGO 42 staff and 115 volunteers in the delta, is providing medical teams, teachers, shelter supplies and other items to 115,000 people in Maubin, Pathein, Myaungmya and Pyapon districts.

 

Knowledge and Dedication for the Nation (KDN), Pact Myanmar and Myanmar Egress are delivering food in partnership with Action Aid. KDN has set up four relief camps providing food, medical aid and temporary shelter to survivors in the delta.

 

Community organizations Pyi Gyi Khin, AFXB and Myanmar Positive Group are organizing support for cyclone-affected HIV-positive persons.

 

Anglican Church of the Province of Myanmar (CPM) has a relief committee that sent three teams to assist and assess three affected areas.

 

International Response

 

United Nations

 

The government of Myanmar approved all remaining visa requests (45) for various UN agencies Wednesday. (OCHA, May 28)

 

More than 200 international staffers are now in Myanmar working with the UN. The UN says those who have entered the delta area have so far not encountered any major problems. (AFP, May 28)

 

The UN estimates that of the 2.4 million affected, around 42 percent had received some form of emergency assistance. Of the 2 million living in the 15 worst-affected townships, only 23 percent had been reached. (AP, May 26)

 

The UNDAC mission to Myanmar officially ended May 22. (OCHA, May 22)

 

There are 109 national UN staff in cyclone-affected areas and almost 100 international UN staff (AP, May 23) in Yangon, according to the UN Department of Safety and Security. UN agencies have landed at least 26 relief flights in Yangon, including 14 from the WFP, four from UNICEF, four from UNHCR, three from WHO and one from OCHA.

 

The UN Resident Coordinator (UNRC) is liaising with government representatives.

 

OCHA says one database is being developed for overview of damages from MRCS and UNICEF assessments and another for medium-term disaster data from each village.

 

The UN Flash Appeal launched May 9 was updated on May 17, requesting US$201 million to support survivors for at least six months. The appeal will support 10 UN organizations and nine NGOs. As of May 28, a total of US$138,129,347 has been committed to relief operations, with a further US$106,152,705 pledged. Of these contributions, US$77.6 million has been committed to projects outlined in the Flash Appeal. An additional US$49.7 million has been pledged. The Flash Appeal is currently covered at 38.5 percent. (OCHA, May 28) More than 20 UN Agencies and NGOs have requested funding through the Appeal. The largest contributor thus far to the Flash Appeal is the UN Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF) with $22.4 million to support 11 projects in seven clusters. The appeal is likely to be revised on June 10.

 

A United Nations Disaster Management Team (UNDMT) with assistance from the IASC developed the cluster system.

 

UNDP leads the early recovery cluster and has established a relay system using road transportation of personnel and supplies into Irrawaddy Division. UNDP and its implementing partner, PACT, have 19 field offices and some 500 staff stationed in the Irrawaddy Delta. Together with WFP, UNDP is delivering rice to affected communities, using UNDP offices in Yangon and the field to aid and coordinate logistics. UNDP has a field staff team in the delta to gather information from the 1,700 villages in which UNDP is operational. UNDP Cash for Work programs are underway in the rice growing area of Kyaiklat in the Irrawaddy delta. (UNDP, May 23)

 

UNICEF leads three clusters: water/sanitation, education and protection and has launched an initial appeal for US$8.2 million. UNICEF has 130 local workers and 17 foreigners. The agency is conducting needs assessments in water/sanitation with 16 NGOs. Immediate priorities have been assessing damages to schools and planning for education to resume on June 1. There are four mobile UNICEF teams in six Irrawaddy delta townships and another seven teams in 17 Yangon townships. UNICEF is still conducting rapid assessments for acute malnutrition in affected areas. UNICEF plans to rapidly move forward with the mapping situation of children and women in affected areas. (UNICEF, May 26) UNICEF has been given permission to move nine monitoring staff to the field. (LC, May 27)