Wrecked Myanmar leaves India aid pilot speechless

Fri May 9, 2008 12:00pm BST
 
Email | Print | | Single Page
[-] Text [+]

By Bappa Majumdar

NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Miles of trees stripped of their leaves, heaps of rubble, twisted electricity poles and swarms of hungry people -- the first sights to greet Indian pilot Prashant Karde as he flew in aid for storm-wrecked Myanmar this week.

The scale of human misery was beyond Karde's comprehension, even as an Indian air force pilot who has participated in many flood relief operations before.

"It was very, very sad to see people with almost no clothes battling it out to survive," said Karde, recollecting his sortie to Yangon over miles of swamps which once were bustling villages and paddy fields.

Wing Commander Karde is among the few Indian air force pilots engaged in flying aid to Myanmar, bringing tonnes of medicines, tents and sheets on his IL-76 cargo plane. But the devastation he witnessed left him emotionally drained.

"I had heard Yangon was a very pretty city with lots of trees and rows of houses, but what I saw from above was complete devastation and ruin," Karde told Reuters on Friday.

Rows of houses were completely razed several kilometers in and around Yangon, Myanmar's main city. Bodies and animal carcasses were floating in the water, Karde said.

The 39-year-old pilot took the freighter down for a closer look, only to see people with very little clothing waving at the aircraft.

"Everything from uprooted trees, wooden planks and clothes were strewn all over the place," he said. "Miles and miles were covered with water and it seemed a devastating flood had hit the country."  Continued...

 
Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling speaks at a Thomson Reuters newsmaker event in London October 21, 2009. REUTERS/Andrew Winning
Darling says stimulus stays

G20 policymakers are agreed that it is too early to pull the plug on economic life-support packages, Chancellor Alistair Darling tells Reuters.  Full Article 

Most Popular General News on Reuters UK

  • Articles
  • Videos
 A demonstrator pounds away the Berlin Wall as East Berlin border guards look on from above the Brandenburg Gate in this November 11, 1989 file photo. REUTERS/David Brauchli/File Photo
Berlin Wall anniversary

Twenty years after the Berlin Wall's fall, Reuters provides an in-depth, multimedia look at one of the 20th Century's defining moments.   Full Coverage