The United Nations says another cyclone is forming in the Burma area.
Amanda Pitt, the spokeswoman of the United Nations humanitarian relief program, couldn't say where the landfall would be or when it would become a full-fledged cyclone.
She told reporters today that another cyclone was likely, saying, "This is terrible."
She said the information about the possible cyclone came from the Joint Typhoon Warning centre, which is part of the UN's World Meteorological Centre.
The May 2-3 cyclone that pulverised Burma's Irrawaddy delta left more than 60,000 people dead or missing.
Meanwhile The United Nations has expressed concerns that some of the aid intended for victims of the cyclon might have been diverted.
Asked if there was a concern the aid might not reach those in need, UN spokeswoman Michel Montas said they had no proof, but were aware of the possibility of misuse.
"That concern exists. We don't have any independent report of a specific portion of the aid going to other victims besides the victims (but) it is a very small percentage of victims that have so far received the aid."
One Rangoon businessman who returned from a personal aid mission to Bogalay, a delta township where at least 10,000 people were killed, said soldiers were appropriating aid.
"There are still some villages in the worst-hit areas that nobody has got to.
"Around Bogalay, private donors are not allowed to distribute their assistance to the victims themselves. We had to hand over what we had."
Concerns have also been raised that child traffickers are targeting isolated young survivors of the catastrophe, after two suspects were already arrested.
UNICEF's chief child protection officer in Burma, Anne-Claire Dufay said many children, separated from their parents in the aftermath of the cyclone, had been approached by human traffickers.
Vulnerable children now face the treat of violence as well as a daily struggle to find enough food and water.