• 3 months ago
Myanmar's junta chief has made a rare request for foreign aid as deadly floods displace over 230,000 people, piling onto devastation in the country marred by an ongoing civil war.
Transcript
00:00Looking over their city, submerged in water, residents in Taungoo, Myanmar, join over 200,000
00:09others in the country fleeing in search of higher ground after deadly floods and landslides
00:15brought on by Typhoon Yagi.
00:17There are many people who have lost their homes, their homes, their homes, their homes.
00:32With thousands stranded, Myanmar's junta chief has made a rare request for foreign aid to
00:38cope with the effects of one of Asia's deadliest storms this year.
00:42Local authorities say at least 33 people have died, but U.S.-backed Radio Free Asia
00:47says that number could be higher than 160.
00:52The Southeast Asian country has been marred by three years of civil war, barring many
00:57aid agencies, including the Red Cross, from reaching the over 18 million people who the
01:03United Nations says need humanitarian assistance.
01:07During last year's Cyclone Mokha, which killed at least 140 people, the military government
01:13blocked aid groups from accessing devastated areas.
01:17Now in the wake of Typhoon Yagi, people have been fleeing by any means necessary, including
01:23by elephant.
01:25The floods have piled onto an already dire situation for people in Myanmar, leaving some
01:31with little to hold on to.
01:50So far, no comments from the U.N. Office for Humanitarian Affairs Coordination in Myanmar,
01:56or the Red Cross, on the junta's request for help.
02:00Meanwhile, people are scrambling to find safety any way they can.
02:05Hawa Zhang and Joy Sun for Taiwan Plus.

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