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Storm victims stand outside their shacks
in Ohnpinsu village, near Labutta on July 10.
Pic: Hla Hla Htay, AFP |
OHNPINSU, Myanmar – Khin Nyo San dashes from her tent to
the nearby shack serving as a school, splashing down a muddy path
in the desperate hope that a visitor from Yangon might have news
of her missing child.
“Please help me find my daughter, I beg you. She is five
years old and a very clever girl. She can easily tell you where
she lives,” the 39-year-old mother whispered to a visiting
AFP reporter.
“If you write about her, people from the rescue camp would
tell me if they saw my daughter. Her name is Aye Myat Thu,”
she said.
The missing child is just one of almost 54,000 people still
unaccounted for more than two months after Cyclone Nargis tore
into Myanmar.
More than 84,000 are confirmed dead, but for people like Khin
Nyo San, who have not been able to find the bodies of their loved
ones, every passing day is a torment of dread that they may eventually
have to give up hope.
When the cyclone sent floodwaters surging through their village
of Ohnpinsu in the Ayeyarwady Delta, their home was washed away,
said Khin Nyo San, and she clung to her daughter with one arm
and her three-month-old son with the other, battling against the
current to keep them from drowning.
She eventually found a relative in a small boat and hoisted
her daughter aboard.
The rest of her memories from that night are a swirl of darkness
and fatigue. She never saw the boat or her daughter again.
“If she had stayed in my arms, she would have survived.
My three-month-old son survived in my arms. Now I have no idea
where she is,” Khin Nyo San said in tears.
The Red Cross and the military government are using state radio
to broadcast the names of children and others separated from their
families.
For thousands of people these broadcasts are a beacon of hope
for reuniting with their families, but in Ohnpinsu, which was
nearly wiped off the map by the storm, radios are now a luxury
enjoyed by few people.
Ohnpinsu is reachable only by a 30-minute boat ride from the
nearest town of Labutta. While the village is only 200 kilometres
(125 miles) west of Myanmar’s main city Yangon, reaching
here takes more than a day of arduous travel.
Any visitor is a source of news, and residents gather round
to ask if their loved ones’ names have been heard on the
radio.
“Some people said they heard my mother’s name on
the radio news. That’s why I’m still looking for her,”
said vendor Khin Hlaing, 47.
“I pray to Buddha every day that I will be able to see
my mother,” she said.
Khin Hlaing’s father survived the storm, but when the family
couldn’t find her mother as they sifted through the debris,
he fell into a depression and stopped eating. He died nine days
later.
“I was able to hold a funeral for my father but I haven’t
heard anything about my mother. I didn’t think she could
have survived after two months, but hope came back after I heard
that her name was announced on the radio,” she said, weeping
openly.
But even if her mother did make it into a shelter, and was identified
by officials, Khin Hlaing has no money or transport to go and
collect her from the emergency camp.
Others here freely admit that denial is the only way they can
cope with their loss.
“I know that my mum couldn’t survive after two months,”
said Maung Htwe, 18, as he cooked rice for the rest of the family
in the shack they cobbled together from storm debris.
“My mother cannot swim and she was afraid whenever a strong
wind came. But I pretend nothing happened to me because I can
see others who lost their entire families. Many people suffered
worse than me,” he said.
“Now I just believe that she’s travelling somewhere,”
he added.
The United Nations estimates that 22 percent of the 2.4 million
severely affected by Cyclone Nargis are suffering from post-traumatic
stress.
“We are counselling them as much as we can. Their stress
would ease if we could ensure that they will have enough food
tomorrow, if we could help them re-start their businesses,”
said Zaw Soe Hteik, a 23-year-old medical doctor who came from
the central city of Mandalay to help storm victims.
Some in the village even said they would feel better if they
had life jackets.
“I want the government to give us life boats, even life
jackets. Then we could survive if there is another storm,”
said Kyaw Hlain, a 57-year-old fisherman.
When the floodwaters destroyed his home, he held onto his daughter
for 30 minutes as they swam for their lives, he said.
“I can still hear my daughter begging, ‘Dad, please
save me’. She died while I carried her on my shoulder, when
the third wave hit her.” – AFP