The leading source for credible citizen reporting

Report Your News
Take the tour...

This event is older than two months and is no longer active. Some links older than two months could be broken.

Report Your News

Click here to post a new related report

Myanmar Relief Work 'Unacceptably Slow'

Source: Press TV
Yangon : Myanmar | about 1 year ago  
Views: 282

Ban-Ki-moon on Monday expressed deep concern and urged the Myanmar's ruling junta to accelerate relief aid distribution for those affected by the devastating cyclone. Cyclone Nargis, which struck Myanmar on May 3, has killed nearly 32,000 people and almost 30,000 others are still missing, Myanmar...

  • Print
  • Share:
  • Share
  • Digg
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Stumbleupon
News Stories
 
  • News Source: Toronto Star | about 1 year ago
    The Asian Highway should be jammed with a convoy of trucks carrying aid supplies from the Thai border to the devastated Burmese city of Rangoon, 400 kilometres away. Instead, most of the people on the road are refugees heading the other way – to...
  • News Source: The Guardian | about 1 year ago
    Sunday May 11 Eight days after cyclone Nargis struck Burma, life is slowly returning to normal in Rangoon, the nation's capital. The streets are littered with torn and twisted trees, but most of the fallen trunks have been pushed to one side, so...
  • News Source: The Courier-Mail | about 1 year ago
    Burma's devastated Irrawaddy delta with stories of families wiped out, bodies floating in rice paddies and starving cyclone victims begging by the roadside. But none of that is making it into the tightly controlled state media. Instead, it is...
  • News Source: NewKerala | about 1 year ago
    M r Samak will carry UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon�s appeal to the Myanmar junta to lift all restrictions on international aid for victims of the May 3 Cyclone Nargis that devastated large parts of the Southeast Asian nation, Thai Foreign...
  • News Source: Toronto Star | about 1 year ago
    Those orphaned or separated from family are the most vulnerable to dehydration, disease May 13, 2008 04:30 AM Olivia Ward Foreign Affairs Reporter Four years ago, all eyes were on the "tsunami children," huddling alone on roadways, separated from...
  • News Source: Turkish Daily News | about 1 year ago
    he United States sent its first aid flight to Myanmar yesterday, but experts warned the relief effort was floundering and 1.5 million cyclone survivors were at grave risk from hunger and disease. The U.S. military transport plane, laden with...
Most Popular Reports

Related Allvoices Reports

Related People

Contributions

Help and Accounts


Use of this site is governed by our Terms of Use Agreement and Privacy Policy.

© Allvoices, Inc 2008-2009. All rights reserved.