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Learning English - Words in the News
16 May, 2008 - Published 12:25 GMT
Rice harvest threat
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Farmers in the areas worst affected by Cyclone Nargis need rice seed before the end of June or Burma's rice harvest this year and next will fail. The United Nations says millions of dollars of agricultural supplies will need to be found immediately. This report from Chris Hogg: The huge wave that hit the Irawaddy Delta when Cyclone Nargis swept over Burma two weeks ago devastated the fragile ecosystem in five coastal areas. The United Nations says in places the damage caused was worse than after the tsunami in
2004. Deforestation meant the wave swept further inland. Food stocks and rice seed were lost. Livestock, tools and equipment too.
Farmers in that part of Burma provide two thirds of the country's rice harvest. The UN's Diedrick DeFlaysha says while the emergency relief operation continues for those in the worst affected areas, efforts need now to be made to get the region's farmers back on their feet. ACT DIEDRICK DEFLAYSHA "Time is running out. We're really rushing against the clock. They have to plant the rice seeds before the end of June, so there is only forty to fifty days left, otherwise the harvest of the monsoon rice will be lost." The UN is trying to source strains of rice seed that will grow better in salty soil. In most places the paddy fields can be repaired but the damage caused by the seawater is harder to reverse. If a new crop of rice can't be planted, it won't just be the families in the delta that suffer. People across Burma will go hungry, and the country will be forced to import large amounts of rice in the months to come. Chris Hogg, BBC News, Bangkok. delta devastated fragile deforestation livestock to get the region's farmers back on their feet rushing against the clock monsoon strains paddy fields |
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