Weeks of unrelenting rain has deluged swathes of northern and western Myanmar, trapping people in remote villages and stretching the country's already threadbare rescue capabilities.
Rising waters, flash floods and landslides have destroyed roads, railways, bridges and houses, according to a report in today's state-run Global New Light of Myanmar, which warned that a cyclone brewing in the Bay of Bengal was likely to bring further misery to coastal and western regions.
Around 150,000 have been displaced or had their livelihoods affected by floods, Chumhre, who goes by one name, added.
Authorities have asked people to move to safer places in the worst-hit areas of Kalay, in northern Sagaing region, and Sittwe, the capital of western Rakhine state, as flights to the city's airport were cancelled.
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Rakhine already hosts some 140,000 displaced people, mainly Rohingya Muslims, living in exposed make-shift coastal camps following communal violence three years ago.
"People had to run for their lives. Some people are now sheltering at schools in Thechaung and Bumay villages," he told AFP, withholding his name.
The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said more poor weather was forecast.
"More people are likely to be affected by flooding and strong winds over the next few days, in particular in Rakhine State," OCHA said in a statement late yesterday.
The military is working with local aid groups to carry out rescue and relief operations, the UN added.