World | Burma Cyclone's Toll Worsens UN says 2.5M people have been 'severely affected' by the storm By John Johnson Posted May 14, 2008 8:04 PM CDT Copied Myanmar children reach their hands out to receive a free banana from a local donor on the outskirts of Yangon, Myanmar, on Wednesday May 14, 2008. (AP Photo) (AP Photo) The UN today nearly doubled its estimate of the number of people "severely affected" by the cyclone in Burma to up to 2.5 million and said they were in dire need of immediate aid, Reuters reports. The frustrated UN chief urged the creation of a "high-level pledging conference" of donor nations and said it was sending a top diplomat to meet with Burmese leaders to try to convince them to allow in more aid and relief workers. Those leaders, however, continue to insist they have the situation under control. The International Red Cross said that between 68,000 and 128,000 people have died so far. Even the lower number is about double the official state figure. Two weeks after the cyclone, relief remains at a relative trickle, and a US military official said supplies were stacking up at the Yangon airport. Read These Next State Department abandons a Biden-era font, blaming DEI. Police say a woman with 100+ prior arrests fatally struck a musician. One donor, 197 kids, and a terrible genetic mutation. The checkbook may soon be a thing of the past. Report an error