Burma rejects 'false picture' of cyclone

YANGON -  Burma's junta attacked "unscrupulous" citizens and foreign media yesterday for presenting a false picture of the devastation…

YANGON - Burma's junta attacked "unscrupulous" citizens and foreign media yesterday for presenting a false picture of the devastation left by Cyclone Nargis as experts began mapping the extent of the disaster.

The New Light of Myanmar, the mouthpiece of the ruling generals, said people had been selling video footage "of invented stories" to foreign news organisations which tarnished the country's image.

"The people who are in touch with the situation feel that the despicable and inhumane acts by local and foreign anti-government groups and self-centred persons and their exploiting of the storm victims are absolutely obnoxious," the newspaper said.

Bootleg copies of DVDs showing the devastation in the hardest-hit Irrawaddy delta have been snapped up on the streets of the former capital Yangon and smuggled out of the country.

READ MORE

Newspaper, television and radio are tightly controlled by the military government, which also severely restricts international media access to the former Burma. "Those foreign news agencies are issuing groundless news stories with the intention of tarnishing the image of Myanmar and misleading the international community into believing that cyclone victims do not receive any assistance," the New Light of Myanmar said.

Dozens of delta villages have yet to receive any relief assistance since the May 2nd cyclone swept over the area and Yangon, leaving 134,000 dead or missing and 2.4 million people in desperate need.

The newspaper report accused media organisations and local people of "luring naive storm victims" with leading questions on their living conditions a week after the junta began evicting thousands from state-run camps out of apparent fear that the tented villages could become permanent.

Plans to accelerate the delivery of aid to the delta were delayed yesterday when poor weather grounded seven UN World Food Programme helicopters in neighbouring Thailand. - (Reuters)