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U.S. to send aid to flood-hit Myanmar - Kerry

By Aung Hla Tun and David Brunnstrom

YANGON/KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) - The United States will announce an aid package for Myanmar to help it provide relief for hundreds of thousands of people affected by floods, Secretary of State John Kerry said on Wednesday.

The Myanmar government appealed for international aid to bolster relief efforts on Monday. Speaking in Kuala Lumpur, Kerry said the U.S. embassy in Yangon was working closely with Myanmar officials to determine the priorities for the aid.

"We express our hopes that the impact of this can obviously be dealt with minimal further loss of life and disruption," Kerry told a meeting with Southeast Asian foreign ministers he co-chaired with Myanmar's foreign minister, Wunna Maung Lwin.

Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop told a subsequent meeting with Southeast Asian counterparts that Australia would provide A$2 million worth of emergency relief.

More than 250,000 people have been affected and 69 killed by flooding that was triggered last week by monsoon rains, according to Myanmar's Ministry of Social Welfare, Relief and Resettlement.

The Myanma Ahlin newspaper, which carried the ministry's statement, also reported that water had risen above spillways at 40 dams across the country.

Myanmar's call for international relief marked a major change from 2008 when a then-military government shunned most outside help after Cyclone Nargis, which caused 130,000 deaths.

While relief workers were still struggling to reach some of the hardest hit and remote areas of the country, the government was taking precautions in others, issuing a flood warning for people living in the Ayeyarwady delta region in Myanmar's southwest.

Flood waters from the north of the country are expected to flow into the area, pushing river levels dangerously high.

According to the Global New Light of Myanmar, elderly people, women and children were being moved out of dangerous areas in the delta.

The region is Myanmar's major rice producing area and the United Nations has raised concerns that its food security could be impacted.

According to the Myanma Ahlin, more than 1.1 million acres (4,451 sq km) of farmland, most of it rice paddies, have been flooded. More than 65,000 acres have been destroyed.

Japan, through the Japan International Cooperation Agency, said it would provide blankets, sleeping mattresses and plastic sheets following the government's appeal for help.

The Chinese embassy in Yangon has also been distributing relief supplies this week.

(Writing by Timothy McLaughlin; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore, Robert Birsel)

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