Gulf Today

Myanmar seeks internatio­nal help as virus bites

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YANGON: Junta authoritie­s in Myanmar are seeking help from the internatio­nal community to tackle the coronaviru­s, state media said on Wednesday, as the impoverish­ed country looks beyond ally China in its struggle to beat back a new wave.

The nation has been in turmoil since the military took power in February, with many hospitals ill-equipped to cope with a surging caseload ater many medical staff walked out in protest at the coup.

Stay-at-home orders affecting millions have failed to halt the surge, with crematoriu­ms working at capacity and volunteers working to bring out the bodies of people who have died in their homes.

Junta leader Min Aung Hlaing told a “coordinati­on meeting to beef up cooperatio­n with the internatio­nal community” that Myanmar should seek money from a Covid-19 response fund set up by the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations.

Efforts were being made to work with ASEAN “and friendly countries,” the Global New Light of Myanmar newspaper reported, without giving details.

Just under 5,000 new cases of Covid-19 were reported on Wednesday - up from around 50 per day in early May - but analysts say the real toll is likely much higher.

Around 1.75 million people have so far been vaccinated according to the State Administra­tion Council - as the junta dubs itself - out of a population of 54 million.

Last week a batch of donated Sinopharm doses arrived from China, junta authoritie­s said, but they would be prioritise­d for those living along the China-myanmar border.

China has also supplied more than 10,000 shots to a rebel group operating near its southern frontier in Myanmar, as Beijing seeks to halt an influx of cases from the coup-wracked country.

The junta has ordered a total of four million vaccine doses from China, it said earlier this month, and Beijing will donate a further two million.

A shipment of 1.5 million doses also arrived from India earlier this year.

The junta leader said vaccinatio­ns needed to be increased, through both donated doses and by developing domestic production, aided by Russia, the newspaper said, adding Myanmar would seek the release of funds from an ASEAN COVID-19 fund.

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People wait to have oxygen tanks refilled outside the Naing oxygen factory in Yangon on Wednesday.
Associated Press ↑ People wait to have oxygen tanks refilled outside the Naing oxygen factory in Yangon on Wednesday.

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