Mystic says "sorry" for Myanmar cyclone prediction
YANGON (Reuters) - Myanmar astrologer Myint Lwin is upset because he failed to see Cyclone Nargis coming.
In a country where personal, political and economic destiny are intertwined with mysticism and astrology, he vows to do better next time.
"Many people died, so I'm very sorry," Myint Lwin said, flipping through a folder of lunar, solar and stellar charts on his tatty wooden desk.
"I'll try hard to research for 2009," the white-haired astrologer said, tweaking one of the wispy strands sprouting from his cheeks.
Working in a shop-house on a bustling Yangon street of tea shops and trading companies, Myint Lwin has studied interplanetary alignments during tropical storms over the past two years.
He is vice-chairman of the Myanmar Astro Research Bureau, which aims to bring together a handful of eminent astrologers to train budding seers.
Word of Myint Lwin's study of cyclones has spread among astrologers in the wake of Cyclone Nargis, which struck the southwestern Irrawaddy Delta and the former capital on May 2, leaving nearly 134,000 dead or missing and 2.4 million destitute.
Almost anyone in Myanmar who can afford it will see an astrologer before making an important decision, even the generals of the military government.
People speculate that on the advice of astrologers, they moved the administrative capital in 2005 from Yangon to Naypyidaw, an enclave in Myanmar's central jungles. Continued...



