People gather to receive water from a
fire engine in Yangon, May 5, 2008.
REUTERS/
Stringer
REF: RTR208LW
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A man walks past a power generator
placed in front of a closed store in
Yangon on May 5, 2008, after Cyclone
Nargis slammed into Myanmar's main city
on Saturday, ripping off roofs, felling
trees and raising fears of major
casualties. REUTERS/
Stringer
REF: RTR208LU
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People walk past a van that has been
crushed by an advertising board that had
been blown over by the winds of Cyclone
Nargis in Yangon May 3, 2008. REUTERS/
Ana Maria Agullo
Zurita
REF: RTR208LK
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A man repairs the roof of a house in
Yangon May 5, 2008, after Cyclone Nargis
slammed into Myanmar's main city on
Saturday, ripping off roofs, felling
trees and raising fears of major
casualties. REUTERS/
Stringer
REF: RTR208LE
%method>
A flooded village is seen in this aerial
view near an airport in Yangon on May 5,
2008, after Cyclone Nargis slammed into
Myanmar's main city on Saturday, ripping
off roofs, felling trees and raising
fears of major casualties. REUTERS/
Stringer
REF: RTR208L2
%method>
Flooded villages are seen in this aerial
view near an airport in Yangon on May 5,
2008, after Cyclone Nargis slammed into
Myanmar's main city on Saturday, ripping
off roofs, felling trees and raising
fears of major casualties. REUTERS/
Stringer
REF: RTR208KZ
%method>
Monks walk past a tree that had been
uprooted by Cyclone Nargis in Yangon in
this picture taken on May 4, 2008.
REUTERS/Ana Maria Agullo
Zurita
REF: RTR208KV
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Aid equipment, including tents and
generators, are prepared in a warehouse
in Singapore before they are delivered
to Myanmar May 6, 2008. Countries
worldwide promised help to Myanmar after
a cyclone killed 10,000 people in just
one town, suggesting the overall death
toll in the impoverished military-run
Southeast Asian nation will be much
higher. The aid was organised by the
Japan International Cooperation Agency.
REUTERS/Vivek
Prakash
REF: RTR208JH
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