CARE International's country director in Myanmar (Burma) speaks about the long road to recovery

9 May 2008

Communication channels and infrastructure are slowly being repaired in Yangon allowing CARE International’s Country Director, Brian Agland, to speak firsthand about life almost a week after Cyclone Nargis crossed the coastline.  

‘Here in Yangon I’m now seeing a lot of people out on the street helping to clear trees and debris. People are out there with machetes and chainsaws and I even saw a group of monks with chainsaws,’ said Brian Agland.

As the massive clean up effort continues, CARE is working tirelessly to meet the needs of the survivors. As areas are becoming more accessible CARE has packaged 6,250 kilograms of rice and first aid kits for distribution throughout the township of Thaketa.

Survival kits for 50,000 families are being assembled in Thailand and are expected to be delivered next week.

The kits include basic items such as blankets, ropes, mosquito nets, buckets, soap and plastic sheeting along with soap, toothbrushes and toothpaste.

CARE is also conducting assessments in Pathien in the Irrawaddy Delta which bore the brunt of the cyclone and suffered massive devastation. As many as 250,000 cyclone survivors in this area are expected to need urgent relief.  

CARE International’s Secretary General, Dr Robert Glasser announced the amount of funding needed to support CARE’s programs to help survivors will be in the vicinity of $10 million. The long-term recovery plan for Myanmar could last three years or more and outlined three distinct phases.

The first phase would focus on the immediate response to the disaster and would last up to six months.

That would be followed by a transitional period, in which survivors of the cyclone begin moving back to normal life and self-sufficiency.

The final stage, which could be as far as three years away, would concentrate on re-establishing the social and economic framework that existed before the cyclone hit.

Despite the devastation and the long road to recovery, the resilient spirit of the local people continues to shine through.

‘What has probably struck me the most here in Yangon is the community spirit,’ explains CARE International’s Country Director, Brian Agland. ‘People here are so used to looking after themselves that they’re not sitting around waiting for people to come in to help, they’re just getting on with it.’

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