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UK gives £12m more aid to Burma | |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Britain has pledged another £12m to the Burma aid effort, bringing total government support to £17m. | Britain has pledged another £12m to the Burma aid effort, bringing total government support to £17m. |
The Department for International Development (Dfid) said £7m of the new money will go to the UN Flash Appeal, the rest to aid agencies. | The Department for International Development (Dfid) said £7m of the new money will go to the UN Flash Appeal, the rest to aid agencies. |
Minister Douglas Alexander reiterated his call to the Burmese authorities to grant full and unfettered access for international assistance. | Minister Douglas Alexander reiterated his call to the Burmese authorities to grant full and unfettered access for international assistance. |
He said: "The lives of many hundreds of thousands of people are at stake." | He said: "The lives of many hundreds of thousands of people are at stake." |
"We know that people are lacking the basics such as clean drinking water, food and healthcare." | "We know that people are lacking the basics such as clean drinking water, food and healthcare." |
£4.6m already spent | |
Just a few pounds can provide essential shelter and aid to those left homeless by the cyclone. Brendan Gormley, DEC Chief Executive | |
He said that the additional £12m would allow humanitarian teams on the ground to continue to deliver emergency assistance. | He said that the additional £12m would allow humanitarian teams on the ground to continue to deliver emergency assistance. |
"The key priority is to deliver humanitarian aid as quickly as possible. The clock is ticking," he said. | "The key priority is to deliver humanitarian aid as quickly as possible. The clock is ticking," he said. |
Mr Alexander said most of the £5m given last week had already been spent, with £4.6m used by aid agencies to provide drinking water, sanitation facilities, basic healthcare and shelter for more than 370,000 people. | |
DFID MONEY SPENT SO FAR More than £1.1m to Save the Children to help 125,000 people in several towns in the Irrawaddy DeltaUp to £1m for Action Against Hunger to help 37,500 people in Bogale Township, Irrawaddy Delta £700,000 for Care to help 60,000 people in towns near Rangoon £500,000 for Medecins Sans Frontiers to help provide basic medical care, water and shelter for 100,000 people More than £700,000 to Merlin to provide emergency healthcare for 50,000 in Laputta Township, Irrawaddy Delta | |
A total of £7m of the new money announced will be given to the UN Flash Appeal, which was launched on 9 May. | |
Of this, £5m will immediately go to the World Food Programme to provide logistical support for the relief operation. | |
Flash appeals raise cash to help the UN and its partners respond to natural disasters. A similar appeal was launched in January 2005 for the Asian tsunami late the previous month. | |
Public generosity | |
Two more Dfid-sponsored flights, carrying shelter and flat-bottomed boats, are due to arrive in Rangoon soon. | |
The Disaster Emergency Committee (DEC), an umbrella organisation for humanitarian aid agencies, said £6m of British aid had reached at least 350,000 people since the cyclone struck. | |
The junta, which is currently controlling distribution, has allowed the UN and some other agencies to hand out supplies directly. | |
However, it is still preventing foreign aid workers from entering cyclone-hit areas. Agencies are relying on their in-country and local partner organisations to distribute supplies. | |
Donations to the DEC Myanmar (Burma) Cyclone Appeal have now surpassed £6m. Chief executive Brendan Gormley said he could not stress enough the vital importance of individual donations from the public. | |
"Just a few pounds can provide essential shelter and aid to those left homeless by the cyclone. | |
"We'd like to thank the generosity people have shown so far and encourage people to continue donating so our agencies can keep up their life-saving work," he said. |
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