From: www.itworld.com

IT didn't fail Myanmar during cyclone, people did

by Dan Nystedt

May 9, 2008 —

 

The growing disaster in Myanmar caused by Cyclone Nargis could have been at
least party avoided had people living in the path of the storm been warned,
the head of the Association
of Southeast Asian Nations
(ASEAN) said Thursday.

The storm warning systems and cyclone
watch centers
in place were all up and running, but the cyclone's
path to Myanmar
across the Bay of Bengal on the Indian Ocean rim has been
left out of the storm warning system, said Surin Pitsuwan, Secretary-General
of ASEAN in a speech in Jakarta on Thursday.

Now, an estimated 100,000 people lay dead in the country and over a million
people are homeless.

It's the second time people have failed to avert disaster in Asia despite having
the right technology in the right place, he said. The first time was the 2004
Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami
. People in Hawaii knew a tsunami was
coming ashore, but they did not know who to call, he said.

"In spite of the technology that we have, in spite of the power that we
have, in spite of the network that we have, we still lose lives needlessly,"
he said.

"So it is more than just the power of technology, it is more than just
the transformation of society through technology, it is certainly a shift in
paradigm here in the minds of our people and particularly our leaders. Because
if you don't have that shift, millions and billions of dollars worth of technology
cannot deliver effective, timely relief to people when they need it most, because
we have reservations about opening up our borders for cooperation, because we
have hesitation about cooperating with the outside world, because we have mistrust
of the outside world."

ASEAN and other groups and countries have been working with Myanmar to allow
aid to flow into the country, but the military leadership of the nation has
been slow to respond. ASEAN is a regional economic, cultural and social membership
organization that includes Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar,
the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.

Cyclone Nargis hit Myanmar's Irrawaddy
Delta
region overnight last Friday. The initial devastation has been exacerbated
by poor communication between government officials in the country and abroad,
but emergency flights of food and medicine are getting through.

The fear now is that a lack of potable drinking water, and diseases such as
dengue fever and malaria, could cause further problems in the country, according
to the World Health Organization.

Countries around Asia have sent supplies or money to aid Myanmar. Indonesia,
for example, sent three planes full of food, medicines and medical personnel
to Myanmar on Thursday, in addition to pledging US$1 million in additional aid.

Microsoft has a team
waiting for permission to enter Myanmar to help people find each other after
the storm using refugee software developed in Kosovo and used throughout Asia
after the 2004 tsunami. The Bill
& Melinda Gates Foundation
has already pledged $3 million to aid efforts
in the country, Bill Gates said in a speech in Jakarta on Friday.