Food Crisis May Hamper Burmese Relief Effort

With soaring food prices, it's unclear where relief will come from.

ByABC News
May 7, 2008, 3:09 PM

May 7, 2008 — -- As the scale of the disaster in Burma caused by Cyclone Nargis starts to emerge, relief agencies and rich countries are lining up to provide emergency aid. But with agencies already hit hard by soaring food prices, and Burma's own rice crop devastated, it is not clear where the relief will come from.

Nargis hit Burma on Saturday, bringing with it a reported oceanic storm surge more than 3 metres high, which is said to have destroyed some low-lying towns. The storm wreaked havoc throughout the heavily populated delta of the Irrawaddy River in the south, and hit the country's largest city, Rangoon.

Burma's military dictatorship today revised its earlier estimate of several hundred killed and admitted that at least 22,000 are dead – with thousands still missing. Many more people have been made homeless by the disaster.

"We have a major humanitarian catastrophe in our hands," Chris Kaye, head of the UN's World Food Programme in Burma, told journalists. "The numbers of people in need are still to be determined, but I'm sure we are talking hundreds and thousands."

Cash Shortfall

But the WFP, the world's largest provider of food aid, is already struggling under huge rises in basic food prices over the past few months, including rice prices that have trebled since December.

The WFP depends entirely on voluntary donations. "Last year we estimated we would need $3.1 billion for 2008, but in March we told our donors we would be $500 million short," Caroline Hurford at the WFP headquarters in Rome, told New Scientist. "Now, with continued price rises, that's going to be $755 million."

That figure did not count aid to Burma. And donors have so far pledged only a quarter of the $3.1 billion to the WFP, says Hurford. Despite that, "sixteen assessment teams are already on the ground and food is being distributed," she says.

But people are likely to need assistance for months, and even if WFP and other aid agencies get enough money to keep buying food, there may be little to buy. Several major rice producers, including India, Vietnam and China, have banned or limited rice exports this year to protect their own supplies.