Myanmar
floods, coup, complicate growing COVID-19 outbreak
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[July 27, 2021]
(Reuters) -Flooding in Myanmar has displaced
hundreds of people, residents said on Tuesday, adding to the misery of a
nation struggling against a fast-spreading coronavirus outbreak while
living through the chaos created by a military coup in February.
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Heavy downpours since the weekend caused flooding in several areas,
forcing healthcare workers to move COVID-19 patients through
drenched streets and alleys in search of someplace drier.
"Hundreds of houses are submerged in water and only their roofs can
be seen," Pyae Sone, a social worker in Hlaingbwe in Kayin State
said by telephone.
"COVID is spreading in the town. There are so many people who have
lost their sense of smell and many who are sick, it's not clear if
it's COVID or seasonal flu.
Volunteers and medical workers trundled bedridden patients, still
hooked up to oxygen tanks, over murky flood waters in the Kayin town
of Myawaddy, Facebook photographs posted by the Karen Information
Center (KIC) media group showed.
About 500 residential areas along the Thai border were affected,
displacing hundreds of people, the group said.
Bo Bo Win, the head of a charity in the town of Mawlamyine, 120 km
(75 miles) away, said at least another 500 people there had also
suffered in the floods.
"These floods swamping large areas of eastern Myanmar are the worst
in some places for many years and they are causing further misery
for people already suffering as COVID-19 surges across the country,"
said Joy Singhal, Head of Myanmar Delegation, International
Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC).
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He said the IFRC was urgently securing more
relief supplies to support thousands of people
at risk from further floods.
Infections in Myanmar have surged since June,
with 4,630 cases and 396 deaths reported on
Monday. Medics and funeral services put the toll
far higher.
The military has struggled to keep control since
taking power in a February coup that triggered
nationwide protests, strikes and fighting on
multiple fronts in border regions as civilians
and ethnic armed groups took up arms against the
junta.
Angered by doctors' support for anti-junta
protests, Myanmar's military has also arrested
several doctors treating COVID-19 patients
independently.
"The U.N. must act immediately to halt the
military junta's attacks, harassment, and
detentions in the midst of a COVID-19 crisis,"
Thomas Andrews, U.N. special rapporteur on human
rights in Myanmar, said in a statement, in which
he called for a "COVID ceasefire" to tackle the
crisis.
(Reporting by Reuters staff; Writing by James
Pearson; Editing by Clarence Fernandez & Simon
Cameron-Moore)
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