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Pics show villages wiped out
06/05/2008 12:04  - (SA)  

A combination of two satellite images taken by Nasa shows Myanmar (with Yangon in red) before and after Cyclone Nargis, with the entire coastal plain clearly flooded. (Nasa, AFP)
  • Cyclone 'worse than tsunami'
  • Over 15 000 die in cyclone
  • Cyclone death toll nears 4 000
  • Cyclone devastates Myanmar
  • Cyclone rips through Yangon
  • Yangon - Large swathes of south-western Myanmar are under water after a devastating cyclone struck at the weekend, killing at least 15 000 people, satellite images show.

    Tropical cyclone Nargis slammed into Myanmar late on Friday, wiping away entire villages in the Irrawaddy delta region and wreaking destruction on a country that is already one of the poorest on the planet.

    Nasa pictures taken on Monday show the entire coastal plain under water, with fallow agricultural areas of the delta - the country's main rice-growing region - particularly hard hit by flooding.

    The storm hammered the country's former capital, Yangon, over the weekend and left hundreds of thousands homeless across the country.

    Flooding, destruction

    The images show the city, which sits on the delta's south-eastern edge and has a population of more than six million, surrounded by flooding.

    State television has broadcast footage of massive destruction across the Irrawaddy delta, where boats were washed away, houses caved in and massive trees uprooted and tossed into the streets.

    The devastated town of Bogalay, where 10 000 people died and 95% of homes were destroyed, sits at the heart of the delta, and there are several other large cities in the affected areas.

    Bago, 80km north-east of Yangon, has a population of 220 000 and also appears to have been hit by heavy flooding.

    Fields littered with corpses

    Foreign aid teams have described scenes of horror in the region, with rice fields littered with corpses and desperate survivors without food or shelter four days after the storm struck.

    The United Nations has warned that the widespread flooding will pose a "major challenge" to aid organisations desperately struggling to get assistance to those affected.

    It believes hundreds of thousands of people have been left homeless in the Yangon region alone, and there are fears of disease spreading in the absence of proper shelter and drinking water.

    UN agencies and charities based in Yangon have already begun assessing the damage and moving to provide emergency food, water and medical supplies.

     
     



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