Myanmar Flooding Death Toll Rises as Damage Widens

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KALAY, Myanmar—The death toll from flooding in Myanmar has climbed to 46, with more than 200,000 people affected, the Ministry of Social Welfare, Relief and Resettlement said Monday.

The flooding has affected residents in 11 of Myanmar’s 14 states and divisions, the ministry said. In addition to the damage to housing and farmland, infrastructure has been badly hit, with roads and rail lines cut in many areas and telecommunication links broken.

Deadly Floods Submerge Myanmar

Waters Rise as Torrential Monsoonal Rains Strike, Killing Dozens and Forcing Thousands More to Flee

Making do at a Kalay evacuation camp on Aug. 2. After days of torrential monsoonal downpours, the toll from flash floods and landslides is likely to jump, the United Nations warned.
A flooded street in Kalay, in Northwest Myanmar’s Sagaing Division, on Aug. 1, a day after the government declared the Sagaing and Magway divisions and Rakhine and Chin states as disaster zones.
A broader view of Kalay’s flooding on Aug. 1. Rising waters triggered by torrential rains killed dozens of people in several regions, officials said.
Rescue workers help humans and cattle out of a flooded area near Thayet township in Magway Division, lies south of Sagaing Division. Myanmar’s monsoon starts at the beginning of June and ends in September.
A ‘Sagaing Division’ signboard in Kalay township on Aug. 2.
The runway of Kalay Airport sitting dry near flooded houses on Aug. 2. The government reported water levels as high as 2.5 meters in Sagaing and 4.5 meters in coastal Rakhine state.
Volunteers unloading relief items at Kalay airport on Aug. 2. Floods forced more than 18,000 people in Myanmar into temporary shelters, officials said Saturday.
Evacuees preparing food on Aug. 2 at a Kalay monastery serving as a temporary camp for people forced to flee the flooding
Villagers taking shelter from flooding on Aug. 2 in Magway Division’s Pwintbyu township.
Some Kalay residents managing to stay dry on Aug. 2.
In Kalay on Aug. 2, it paid to have a raft.
The roof of a flooded Kalay home provided a precarious dry spot for a pair of dogs on Aug. 2.
Better than a roof or even a raft: a boat.
Making do at a Kalay evacuation camp on Aug. 2. After days of torrential monsoonal downpours, the toll from flash floods and landslides is likely to jump, the United Nations warned.
A flooded street in Kalay, in Northwest Myanmar’s Sagaing Division, on Aug. 1, a day after the government declared the Sagaing and Magway divisions and Rakhine and Chin states as disaster zones.

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Making do at a Kalay evacuation camp on Aug. 2. After days of torrential monsoonal downpours, the toll from flash floods and landslides is likely to jump, the United Nations warned. YE AUNG THU/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES
A flooded street in Kalay, in Northwest Myanmar’s Sagaing Division, on Aug. 1, a day after the government declared the Sagaing and Magway divisions and Rakhine and Chin states as …
A broader view of Kalay’s flooding on Aug. 1. Rising waters triggered by torrential rains killed dozens of people in several regions, officials said. SAI ZAW/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES
Rescue workers help humans and cattle out of a flooded area near Thayet township in Magway Division, lies south of Sagaing Division. Myanmar’s monsoon starts at the beginning of June and ends in September. PAUKKALAY THAYET/EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY
A ‘Sagaing Division’ signboard in Kalay township on Aug. 2. KHIN MAUNG WIN/ASSOCIATED PRESS
The runway of Kalay Airport sitting dry near flooded houses on Aug. 2. The government reported water levels as high as 2.5 meters in Sagaing and 4.5 meters in coastal Rakhine state. SOE ZEYA TUN/REUTERS
Volunteers unloading relief items at Kalay airport on Aug. 2. Floods forced more than 18,000 people in Myanmar into temporary shelters, officials said Saturday. KHIN MAUNG WIN/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Evacuees preparing food on Aug. 2 at a Kalay monastery serving as a temporary camp for people forced to flee the flooding LYNN BO BO/EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY
Villagers taking shelter from flooding on Aug. 2 in Magway Division’s Pwintbyu township. HKUN LAT/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Some Kalay residents managing to stay dry on Aug. 2. LYNN BO BO/EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY
In Kalay on Aug. 2, it paid to have a raft. LYNN BO BO/EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY
The roof of a flooded Kalay home provided a precarious dry spot for a pair of dogs on Aug. 2. SOE ZEYA TUN/REUTERS
Better than a roof or even a raft: a boat. SOE ZEYA TUN/REUTERS
Making do at a Kalay evacuation camp on Aug. 2. After days of torrential monsoonal downpours, the toll from flash floods and landslides is likely to jump, the United Nations warned. YE AUNG THU/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES
A flooded street in Kalay, in Northwest Myanmar’s Sagaing Division, on Aug. 1, a day after the government declared the Sagaing and Magway divisions and Rakhine and Chin states as disaster zones. SAI ZAW/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES

Opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi visited one of the flood-afflicted areas Monday, raising her profile amid a national disaster that could have consequences in November’sgeneral election.

Over the weekend, President Thein Sein visited the areas in central Myanmar hit hardest by flooding from almost continuous rains since mid-July. On Friday, he declared four areas of the country disaster zones, but only after he had come under a barrage of criticism in the press and on social media for failing to quickly mobilize relief.

Some coastal areas took a double beating late last week when a tropical storm whipped through, posing a particular danger to badly built and poorly located camps in Rakhine state for more than 100,000 people displaced in the past few years by ethnic conflicts.

President Thein Sein, meeting Sunday with flood victims in northwestern Sagaing division, said waters were slowly receding and that he hoped people could soon leave evacuation shelters, many of which are located at Buddhist monasteries. He told state television that the government plans to begin reconstruction once evacuated people return to their homes.

Ms. Suu Kyi, whose National League for Democracy party is expected to pose a tough challenge to Thein Sein’s ruling Union Solidarity and Development Party in the coming polls, on Saturday named its nationwide list of candidates. Ms. Suu Kyi will run for re-election to Parliament but is barred from becoming president under a constitution that was drafted under military rule.

A referendum on the constitution was held in 2008 as Myanmar was hit by Cyclone Nargis, which killed about 140,000 people. The military government’s inability to mount a useful relief effort, and initial reluctance to accept foreign assistance, did much to discredit its ability to run the country.

Ms. Suu Kyi on Monday used a small wooden boat to travel the flooded areas in Bago township, 65 miles (100 kilometers) northeast of Yangon. She visited several shelters for flood victims, where on behalf of a foundation named for her late mother, a former diplomat, she handed over donations of rice and drinking water.

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