South Asia

Myanmar: UN aid convoy reaches displaced in Kachin

Myanmar: UN aid convoy reaches displaced in Kachin

| | 11 Sep 2013, 01:34 pm
New York, Sept 11 : The first aid convoy in nearly two years has delivered food, medicine and other supplies to thousands of displaced people in Myanmar’s Kachin state, the United Nations relief arm Tuesday reported.

 More than 4,000 people have received food, medicine and other aid from UN agencies and partner organizations in the Woi Chyai camp in the town of Laiza.

 
The Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said that this is the first aid convoy since December 2011.
 
“The UN and our partners in Myanmar are telling us that it is essential that this convoy should be the first of many to the area to help the people there,” spokesperson Jens Laerke said in Geneva, adding that there are 53,000 people in need in areas such as this which are not controlled by the Government.
 
OCHA says the relief items will supplement assistance delivered on a regular basis by local groups and other partners.
 
In January, the Government announced a unilateral ceasefire following a three-week offensive against ethnic Kachin rebels. A month later, the parties held talks in China, where they agreed to work on an overall framework to de-escalate the conflict.