Myanmar: Storm - IRIN: 12-Oct-08
IRIN
MYANMAR: Disabled people await post-cyclone aid
12 October 2008
YANGON, 12 October 2008 (IRIN) - More than five months after Cyclone
Nargis struck southern Myanmar, people with physical disabilities (PwDs)
continue to await assistance. Little of the international relief
targeting the 2.4 million people affected has filtered down to them.
Scores lost their homes, property and livelihoods to the storm, which
left nearly 140,000 dead or missing.
Others lost their mobility devices - including, crutches, wheelchairs
and prosthetic limbs - to flood waters. Many were also badly traumatised
and have yet to receive the psycho-social support they need.
"Many people were affected by the cyclone and are now receiving
assistance. Unfortunately very little has come to us," said Nay Lin Soe,
who was stricken with polio as a youngster and can only walk with the
aid of crutches.
Today he is one of 125 disabled people working together to help other
PwDs in his community rebuild their lives and homes. They have a simple
office within the Eden Centre for Disabled Children in Yangon, the
former Burmese capital.
30,000 PwDs in Ayeyarwady Delta
Prior to Nargis, there were an estimated 30,000 PwDs living in Myanmar's
badly affected Ayeyarwady Delta, including 5,000 children. In the wake
of the disaster, health experts speculate that another 3,000-5,000 PwDs
may have been added to their ranks.
"It is obvious that people with disabilities have been completely
overlooked so far in all general and sectoral assessments," Thomas
Calvot, disability and emergency adviser for Handicap International
France, who spent three weeks in Myanmar, told IRIN.
The Post Nargis Joint Assessment (PONJA), considered by many as the
blueprint for the humanitarian response to the area, makes only brief
mention of PwDs, saying they should be included.
An assessment of the number of PwDs and the challenges ahead in terms of
helping them has yet to be carried out.
Challenges
The cyclone-affected area was inaccessible at the best of times, with no
concrete paths, houses built on stilts and areas largely surrounded by
water. For PwDs things are obviously more difficult.
The psychosocial impact of the cyclone on PwDs, documented in the PONJA,
is also significant, with some left apart or behind when their families
or caretakers fled the storm. Some are experiencing difficulties
recovering a sense of inclusion in their communities.
Others suffer from sensorial or mental impairments and are often not
properly informed about what is happening around them.
Calvot would like to see more attention given to such groups: Their
participation in interagency coordination mechanisms is nearly
nonexistent.
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Myanmar: Cyclone Nargis www.cidi.org/incident/myanmar-08e