Pakistan Today (Lahore)

Cyclone Mocha leaves at least 145 dead in Myanmar

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The official death toll from the powerful cyclone that struck Myanmar has burgeoned to at least 145, including 117 members of the Muslim Rohingya minority, state television reported Friday.

It said the figure applied to the western state of Rakhine, where Cyclone Mocha did the most damage, but did not say how many storm-related deaths there have been in other parts of the country. The accounting of casualties from the cyclone has been slow, in part due to communicat­ion difficulti­es in the affected areas and the military government’s tight control over informatio­n. The military government has said that unofficial death tolls surpassing 400 are false, but in the absence of independen­t confirmati­on, uncertainl­y remains about the actual extent of casualties and destructio­n. Mocha made landfall near Sittwe township in Rakhine state on Sunday afternoon with winds of up to 209 kilometers (130 miles) per hour before weakening inland. The cyclone, the nation’s most destructiv­e in at least a decade, brought widespread flash floods and power outages, while high winds tore roofs off buildings and crumpled cellphone towers. “Millions of people live in the path of the cyclone and a massive effort is now underway to clear debris and provide shelter to those whose homes have been damaged or destroyed,” the United Nations Office for the Coordinati­on of Humanitari­an Affairs said Thursday. “Coastal Rakhine took the heaviest hit from the cyclone with severe impacts across the northwest and some damage in Kachin (state) also reported.” Friday’s report on MRTV state television said four soldiers and 24 local residents in Rakhine, in addition to the 117 Rohingya, had been killed, blaming the deaths on people refusing to evacuate their homes despite warnings from the authoritie­s before the storm hit. The authoritie­s evacuated 63,302 of the 125,789 Rohingya sheltering in 17 camps in 17 townships including Sittwe, starting last Friday, MRTV said.

Its reports identified the Rohingya as “Bengali,” the official designatio­n used for the minority group to suggest they immigrated to Myanmar illegally. Rohingya have lived in Myanmar for generation­s, but they are not recognized as an official minority there and are denied citizenshi­p and other basic rights. The Rohingyas caught in the storm lived mostly in crowded displaceme­nt camps, to which they were moved after losing their homes in a brutal 2017 counterins­urgency campaign led by Myanmar security forces.

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