Myanmar lets ICRC deliver aid to detention centers

Tue May 13, 2008 5:10pm BST
 
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By Stephanie Nebehay

GENEVA (Reuters) - Myanmar authorities have allowed the International Committee of the Red Cross to distribute food and other supplies to inmates held in three detention centers in cyclone-hit areas, the ICRC said on Tuesday.

While it marked the first access the neutral humanitarian agency has had to detainees in Myanmar in more than two years, ICRC spokeswoman Carla Haddad said the operation could not be considered as a resumption of its prison monitoring visits. That would requires access to prisoners in private to evaluate their conditions of detention.

In a statement, the ICRC said a truck carrying four tonnes of relief supplies had reached the cyclone-stricken Irrawaddy delta on Tuesday. This followed an ICRC relief flight which brought 35 tonnes of medical and sanitation equipment on Sunday.

"Basic food items, blankets, clothing, essential drugs and soap were distributed today (Tuesday) at three detention sites -- two labor camps and a facility for women -- identified by the Ministry of Home Affairs as being in urgent need of assistance," it said.

Pierre-Andre Conod, head of the ICRC's delegation in Yangon, welcomed the development.

"This gave us the chance to meet some of the immediate needs of the people detained in these facilities, and to see, first hand, the scale of damage done by the cyclone, enabling us to get a better idea of what kind of help is needed," he said.

Aid distributions were planned in at least eight other prisons and labor camps over the next two days but would pose additional challenges of moving supplies by boat, the ICRC said.

The ICRC has been working in Myanmar since 1986, providing limbs and physical rehabilitation for landmine victims and other disabled people at its orthopedic centers.  Continued...

 

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