Photo: ICRC
Photo: ICRC

Life after Nargis

As the monsoon approaches a year after Burma’s cyclone catastrophe, the victims are still without support. Now, more suffering looms.
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It has now been a bit over a year since Burma's worst natural disaster on record, Cyclone Nargis, struck the Irrawaddy delta. Yet since that day, 2 May, the repercussions of the cyclone have gone far beyond the meteorological and disaster-related. Indeed, the subsequent year has seen the emergence of debates that go to the core of the lives of all Burmese – and to the heart of governance and society in the country.

Nargis is said to have taken the lives of at least 148,000 people. As of early May 2009, the area is still short of 500,000 homes, 200,000 people are without safe drinking water, and half of the Irrawaddy fishing fleet is said to remain sunk. Aung, a 25-year-old thatcher from Lubutta township in Ayerwaddy division, lost some 30 relatives during the cyclone, along with his home and livelihood. Yet the only aid he and his wife have received over the past year has been two cups of rice, around ten days after the storm hit.

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Himal Southasian
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