Myanmar on alert as cyclone grows

12 May, 2013

Myanmar's authorities were on alert Saturday as a cyclone threatened to hit the west of the country where around 140,000 people displaced by communal violence languish in flood-prone camps. Local radio in Rakhine State, rocked last year by violence between Buddhists and Rohingya Muslims, issued warnings while loudspeakers relayed messages to people in villages, Ye Htut, spokesman for the President's Office, said on his official Facebook page.
Meteorologists said it was unclear whether the cyclone would hit Rakhine over the next days or veer further west to neighbouring Bangladesh, but Myanmar's Department of Meteorology and Hydrology said heavy rains and strong winds were likely to batter Rakhine regardless. The UN's disaster assessment agency later said the cyclone, was likely to strike land near Chittagong, in Bangladesh, but preparations to provide relief in Rakhine were underway, including providing shelter for up to 13,000 displaced people in the coastal capital of Sittwe.
Rakhine, one of Myanmar's poorest and most remote states, is particularly vulnerable to heavy storms, with makeshift camps housing tens of thousands of mainly Rohingya people displaced by an eruption of communal violence last year. "Of particular concern is the welfare of some 140,000 IDPs (internal displaced persons) that are living in poorly constructed camps or makeshift accommodation in Rakhine State," the UN's Office for the Co-ordination of Humanitarian Affairs said in statement late Saturday.

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