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25 June 2008 : Burma News Extra


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More than 30,000 Myanmar refugees resettled
Myanmar: 84,500 died in cyclone
Clooney, Pitt launch Myanmar ad campaign
China offers rare praise for Myanmar's drug fight
Myanmar: 84,500 died in cyclone
Karen Armed Rebellion in Burma Takes a New Turn: Ex-American Marines as Military
Myanmar continues to suffer after cyclone

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More than 30,000 Myanmar refugees resettled
AP
25 June 2008

More than 30,000 Myanmar refugees living in camps in Thailand have been sent to third countries in what the United Nations said Wednesday had become the world's largest refugee resettlement operation.

Most of the refugees are Karen ethnic minority people who had been sheltered in nine refugee camps along the Thai-Myanmar border.

The U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees said 30,144 refugees have left Thailand to start new lives abroad since the resettlement operation began in January 2005. A UNHCR statement described it as the world's largest refugee resettlement operation.

But the camps remain home to 123,500 refugees and asylum-seekers.

"Some of the refugees have been here for nearly two decades. Some were born in refugee camps, grew up there and are now raising their own families in refugee camps," UNHCR regional representative Raymond Hall said Wednesday. "For them resettlement offers a way out of the camps and the opportunity for a fresh start in life."

The United Nations and human rights groups say that over the years the Myanmar military has burned villages, killed civilians and committed other atrocities against the Karen, who have long fought for autonomy from the central government.

Some activists have charged that Myanmar's ruling junta is waging a genocidal campaign against the Karen and other rebellious ethnic groups.

Hall said prospects for the refugees to return to Myanmar or settle permanently in Thailand were dim.

Nearly 21,500 of the resettled refugees have gone to the United States, while Australia has received 3,400 and Canada 2,600.

Other resettlement countries are Britain, Finland, Ireland, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway and Sweden.

Myanmar refugees are now leaving Thailand for resettlement at an average rate of more than 300 a week, the UNHCR said.

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Myanmar: 84,500 died in cyclone
AP
Tue Jun 24, 2:33 PM ET

Myanmar said Tuesday that 84,500 people perished in last month's cyclone, up from the last official announcement that 77,700 had died in the devastating storm.

Meanwhile, a representative from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, the regional bloc that includes Myanmar, said a recent assessment tour found the needs of storm survivors were being met.

Deputy Foreign Minister Kyaw Thu said in a speech that the official death toll now stands at 84,537 dead, with 53,836 still missing. The update was the first since May 17, when officials said 77,738 had died and 55,917 were missing.

The increased total represents victims of the storm itself rather then any new casualties due to disease or starvation in the cyclone's aftermath, he said, stating that the assessment found no such post-cyclone deaths.

"There have been fewer and fewer requests for emergency assistance coming from communities and local authorities," he added. "Various reports indicate that the worst of the crisis may have stabilized, although it is by no means over."

The casualty toll accords roughly with an estimate made last month by the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.

Cyclone Nargis cut a swath of destruction May 2-3 through the delta and the region around the country's largest city, Yangon.

A major international effort is under way to aid some 2.4 million people affected by the storm, the worst natural disaster in Myanmar's modern history.

A special task force has completed an assessment of the damage and the needs of survivors. A final report on its findings is due in July.

Some 350 representatives of the United Nations, the Myanmar government and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations — ASEAN — have been traveling to villages in the hard-hit Irrawaddy delta to gather information.

"Access was unlimited and unfettered. The basic needs of the victims are being met for their early recovery," Surin Pitsuwan, ASEAN secretary-general and head of the bloc's humanitarian task force in Myanmar, said Tuesday in Yangon.

Preliminary findings by the so-called Tripartite Core Group indicated that 45 percent of those affected are receiving food through humanitarian distribution, according to people who attended a survey presentation.

The findings also indicated that 42 percent of all food stocks were destroyed in the 380 affected villages that were surveyed.

The survey's data on shelter, published on a U.N. Web site, indicated more than 83 percent of those people surveyed were now living in their own homes. Many people took shelter at Buddhist temples and government-run refugee camps immediately after the cyclone.

More than 90 percent of those surveyed said they still required assistance to rebuild.

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Clooney, Pitt launch Myanmar ad campaign
AFP
Wed Jun 25, 2:41 AM ET

Hollywood stars George Clooney and Brad Pitt joined forces with Asian political figures in an advertising campaign calling on the region to push Myanmar's junta to allow in more cyclone aid.

A full page advertisement in Indonesian English language daily Jakarta Post by US-based pressure group Not On Our Watch said Asia must pressure the reclusive regime to fully open its doors to foreign aid after Cyclone Nargis.

"Burma's neighbours have the power to help victims who remain desperately in need," said the advertisement, signed by former and current regional leaders and Nobel laureates, referring to Myanmar by its previous name.

Signatories included former Philippine president Corazon Aquino, East Timorese President Jose Ramos-Horta, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Nobel peace laureate Shirin Ebadi and former Czech president Vaclav Havel.

The advertisement said Myanmar's regime is risking thousands of lives by holding out on aid, although the junta has been giving increasing access to foreign relief workers despite its initial refusal to cooperate.

The May 2-3 cyclone left around 138,000 people dead and missing in Myanmar's Irrawaddy Delta region, according to the junta, and the UN estimates 2.4 million people are in need of aid.

The junta has refused most offers of Western aid but allowed in a 250-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) backed assessment team on June 2.

Jakarta is the home of the secretariat of ASEAN, which has been criticised for failing to strongly press Myanmar's government to allow full foreign aid.

The advertisement in the Jakarta Post was funded by the board of New York-based Not On Our Watch, which includes Clooney, Pitt and fellow actor Matt Damon.

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China offers rare praise for Myanmar's drug fight
Reuters
By Ben Blanchard / Wed Jun 25, 2:14 AM ET

China praised Myanmar's efforts to fight drugs on Wednesday, lauding the actions of a military government often criticized in the United States and Europe for not doing enough to tackle the problem.

Yang Fengrui, head of the Ministry of Public Security's Narcotics Control Bureau, said the amount of drugs entering China from the Golden Triangle, which includes Laos and Thailand, had fallen.

In 2004, China seized 10.8 tonnes of heroin from northern Myanmar, but that had dropped to just 4.6 tonnes last year, leading to a resulting rise in the drug's street price due to its growing scarcity, Yang told a news conference in Beijing.

That area under cultivation has dropped from a high of 165,300 hectares (about 390,000 acres) to 18,600 hectares (45,961), Yang said.

Last September, Washington said that the former Burma had "failed demonstrably" to fight illegal drugs and that it had been "very lackluster" in interdiction and fighting corruption.

The country was also Asia's largest source of methamphetamine pills, production of which was being ramped up as opium cultivation fell, the report added.

The United States and Europe have been fierce critics of Myanmar's human rights record and continued detention of Nobel Peace Prize winner and opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi, leading to wide-ranging sanctions.

But China has been a steady friend of the generals who have ruled for decades, standing by them after they crushed a pro-democracy uprising in 1988 and swept aside a 1990 election won by Aung San Suu Kyi and her National League for Democracy.

Yang said the sanctions on Myanmar, toughened following last autumn's bloody suppression of renewed pro-democracy protests, would not affect China's cooperation with Myanmar.

"We will keep cooperating on intelligence exchanges, fighting drug traffickers, eradicating drugs, personnel training and helping the Myanmar government with substitution programs."

Over the past few years, China has spent around 700 million yuan ($101.9 million) on crop substitution programs in Myanmar to get people to stop farming opium poppies, Yang said.

($1=6.866 Yuan)

(Editing by Nick Macfie and David Fox)

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Myanmar: 84,500 died in cyclone
AP
Tue Jun 24, 2:33 PM ET

Myanmar said Tuesday that 84,500 people perished in last month's cyclone, up from the last official announcement that 77,700 had died in the devastating storm.

Meanwhile, a representative from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, the regional bloc that includes Myanmar, said a recent assessment tour found the needs of storm survivors were being met.

Deputy Foreign Minister Kyaw Thu said in a speech that the official death toll now stands at 84,537 dead, with 53,836 still missing. The update was the first since May 17, when officials said 77,738 had died and 55,917 were missing.

The increased total represents victims of the storm itself rather then any new casualties due to disease or starvation in the cyclone's aftermath, he said, stating that the assessment found no such post-cyclone deaths.

"There have been fewer and fewer requests for emergency assistance coming from communities and local authorities," he added. "Various reports indicate that the worst of the crisis may have stabilized, although it is by no means over."

The casualty toll accords roughly with an estimate made last month by the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.

Cyclone Nargis cut a swath of destruction May 2-3 through the delta and the region around the country's largest city, Yangon.

A major international effort is under way to aid some 2.4 million people affected by the storm, the worst natural disaster in Myanmar's modern history.

A special task force has completed an assessment of the damage and the needs of survivors. A final report on its findings is due in July.

Some 350 representatives of the United Nations, the Myanmar government and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations — ASEAN — have been traveling to villages in the hard-hit Irrawaddy delta to gather information.

"Access was unlimited and unfettered. The basic needs of the victims are being met for their early recovery," Surin Pitsuwan, ASEAN secretary-general and head of the bloc's humanitarian task force in Myanmar, said Tuesday in Yangon.

Preliminary findings by the so-called Tripartite Core Group indicated that 45 percent of those affected are receiving food through humanitarian distribution, according to people who attended a survey presentation.

The findings also indicated that 42 percent of all food stocks were destroyed in the 380 affected villages that were surveyed.

The survey's data on shelter, published on a U.N. Web site, indicated more than 83 percent of those people surveyed were now living in their own homes. Many people took shelter at Buddhist temples and government-run refugee camps immediately after the cyclone.

More than 90 percent of those surveyed said they still required assistance to rebuild.

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Karen Armed Rebellion in Burma Takes a New Turn: Ex-American Marines as Military
Asian Tribune
Advisors/Trainers: US Watching
Wed, 2008-06-25 14:26
Daya Gamage – US Bureau Asian Tribune Investigative Report – Part One

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Washington, D.C. June 25 (Asiantribune.com): Along the Thailand’s western border with Burma (also known as Myanmar) is a small but active Thai frontier town Mae Sot considered the rendezvous of foreigners, with military skills, to offer their expertise to the five-decade old rebellion of the Karen ethnic group to destabilize the most undemocratic and oppressive regime in Burma.

The Karen people’s liberation struggle was intensified with the advent of General Ne Win’s military regime in 1962. And, took a new turn since the current military junta (SPDC- State Peace and Development Council) denied the nation’s democratically elected leader Aung San Suu Kyi her legitimate right to govern in the aftermath of her party’s landslide victory at the 1988 parliamentary election and put her in prolonged house arrest.

And currently, the Karen armed rebellion is taking a different shape and turn with former U.S. Marines who have expertise in combat training, counter-terrorism operations, intelligence and weapons procurement entering the scene. And this time, giving combat expertise to the Karen rebels, as learned by Asian Tribune, looks serious.

The most significant twist is that a section of the United States Government, notably the State Department, is aware of the combat involvement of the ex-Marines but has chosen to be a distant observer but very much abreast of developments.

President Bill Clinton’s secretary of State Madeleine Albright, last week appointed a top foreign policy and national security advisor to Democratic Party presidential candidate Barack Obama in an OP-ED piece written on June 11 The New York Times advocates intervention in Burma for a ‘regime change’.

The Asian Tribune had the rarest opportunity of an ‘up close and personal’ enlightenment of ‘Karen Country’ and the ‘battle front’ in the Karen rebellion districts.

The journey starts in that Thai frontier town of Mae Sot.

Former U.S. Marine Jack Slade was a weapons trainer, counter-terrorism expert, counter-drug personnel, military intelligence expert, and above all a seasoned Marine whose eight and a half year career sent him to Cuba, Columbia and Ecuador in the South American region, and Tanzania and Kenya in the African Continent. He has been a weapons trainer in military camps on U.S. soil.

For security and other obvious reasons Asian Tribune decided not to disclose his real identity.

In mid March this year Jack Slade was sitting here in MAE SOT expecting a call from a top military leader of the Karen National Liberation Army (KNLA) Colonel Saw Ner Dah. Another ex-Marine and Vietnam veteran 62-year old Thomas Bleming (he gave the writer the clearance to use his real name), who is now in contact with Asian Tribune US Bureau, wanted Colonel Ner Dah to contact Slade to enter the Karen territory in Burma. Incidentally, Bleming is currently exploring the feasibility of the ‘militarization’ of the KNLA, a militarization that the KNLA has never experienced.

Karen, a major ethnic group in Burma whose desire for an autonomous homeland has triggered relentless and most brutal attacks by the SPDC military junta. The Asian Tribune learned during its familiarization exercise, or call it a familiarization tour, that despite the KNLA insists their fighting cadres are holding their ground it has just 4000 fighters and weapons from the Vietnam War era and earlier and its rebels are outgunned and outmanned. The Burmese military has an estimated 500,000 in its cadre. This is where the ex-Marines of the U.S. are going to be handy with new strategy, modern weapons and a gaming plan that can outfox the military junta.

Awaiting the call from Ner Dah in MAE SOT the veteran former US Marine had already gone through the American Embassy in Bangkok. So, Jack Slade’s credentials were no secret to the officials of the embassy.

This writer who is aware of the manner in which US foreign diplomatic missions operate because of his long employment with the US State Department knows full well that the Bangkok US Mission routinely notifies in classified cables of such developments to the United States Department of State in Washington.

This confirms that both US offices in Bangkok and Washington, DC knew the intention of Jack Slade and his associates. And, Asian Tribune is aware that the State Department is knowledgeable of Bleming’s current role. Bleming is a well known talking point among American Foreign Service Officers who are either knowledgeable of the developments in Burma or are officially involved in Burmese Affairs. Asian Tribune also learned that KNLA military leader Colonel Ner Dah, despite his status being below to that of the supreme commander, had met State Department officials in Washington more than once, according to Thomas Bleming.

Despite Bleming’s on the phone instructions to meet, and introduction of Jack Slade to Colonel Saw Ner Dah, the latter, a six-year undergraduate student at the prestigious University of California, Berkley in the nineties, previously had had Slade’s credentials whetted from the officials of the American Embassy in Bangkok. Colonel Ner Dah, now a veteran fighter, did not want to take chances. Ner Dah and Slade are now in electronic contact figuring out where and how to meet.

The journey from Mae Sot was in a truck to another border town within Thailand, Umphang, accompanied by Ner Dah’s acolytes. It was about 200 miles that took little over four hours. The journey in the truck ended in Umphang awaiting the arrival of Colonel Ner Dah to enter into the Burmese territory and on to the Karen province. But there was some disruption of communication with the Colonel and Jack Slade’s party when the latter’s party had to travel further in to the jungle area but about half a mile close to the Burmese border.

After about four hours of confusion in the most rugged terrains in the Thai-Burma border finally the two parties met. Ner Dah, who is seeking to modernize his fighting cadre to oust the Burmese military junta, met a veteran ex-Marine who has all the credentials to make the Karen rebellion an invincible force in its march toward democracy, rule of law and civil liberties, and above all an autonomous homeland. The rendezvous of Jack Slade and Colonel Ner Dah was possible because of the efforts by Thomas Bleming on phone with both parties. Bleming was operating from his U.S. residence in Wyoming.

The party, led by Colonel Ner Dah, entered the Burmese territory. At a distance not very far report of gun fire by the military of the SPDC could be heard and the rebels knew how to avoid them.

The Asian Tribune exclusively documents here the current twists and turns of the Karen rebellion for independence, self-determination and democracy with active involvement of former American Marines who are well knowledgeable of how to conduct a rebellion. If the impression is that the U.S. officials both in Bangkok and Washington, D.C. are having a passive attitude of this significant development it is a gross understatement.

The Background: The Karens

The Karen, an ethnic group of Sino-Tibetan origin, is the second largest of the 135 ethnic groups that represent more than one-third of the population in Burma.

Members of these groups mainly live in the seven states around the central Burma plain, each named after the ethnic group that predominates its population. However members of these ethnic groups are also resident in the other seven divisions, populated mainly by people of the majority Burman ethnicity, that make up Burma (Also known as Myanmar).

According to official statistics, nearly 3,500,000 Karen live in Myanmar, with more than 830,000 residing in Kayin State. Among the Karen are practicing Buddhists, Christians and animists.

Karen Armed Opposition

Since Burma’s independence from the United Kingdom in 1948, armed opposition groups from different ethnic minorities have fought against the central government for independence or greater autonomy. The Karen National Union (KNU) and its armed wing, the Karen National Liberation Army (KNLA), were formed in 1949 with the aim of independence or greater autonomy for the Karen.

While the majority of other ethnic armed groups have reached cease-fire arrangements with the Burmese military junta known as the SPDC, which has granted them certain administrative powers over their territories, the KNU has continued to fight for a political settlement. Having lost several of its key bases, the majority of the KNLA’s activities against the military in recent years have been small-scale attacks.

In January 2004 a provisional cease-fire was agreed between the KNU and the SPDC. However, low-level skirmishes continued and civilians were displaced by military operations against the KNU, particularly in northern Hpa’an District, Kayin State and Nyaunglebin District, Bago Division. KNU leaders reported that, following a visit to Rangoon (Yangon) in October 2006, nearly a year after the state police offensive against the Karen commenced, the ceasefire was formally cancelled. The SPDC stated that they were not prepared to discuss a political settlement. In December 2006, the KNU’s leader, General Saw Bo Mya, died.

The KNU was dominated in the last three decades by Bo Mya, who was president from 1976-2000. The KNU was for many years able to fund its activities by controlling black market trade across the border with Thailand. After a failed uprising of the Burmese people in 1988, the Burmese military government turned to China for help. Various economic concessions were offered to China in exchange for weapons. The Burmese Army was massively expanded and began to offer deals to groups fighting the government. The groups were offered the choice of cooperating with the military junta or being destroyed.

The KNU's effectiveness was severely diminished after the fall of its headquarters at Manerplaw near the Thai border, in 1994. At that time, a group of Buddhist soldiers in the KNLA went over to the side of the Burmese military junta. This group, known as the Democratic Karen Buddhist Army (DKBA), was given territory inside of Burma to rule over in exchange. They played a significant part in the capture of Manerplaw. While the DKBA claims to be fighting against anti-Buddhist discrimination inside the KNU, it is in practice the small private army of a warlord in alliance with the Burmese military junta.

Since then, the KNU and KNLA have continued to fight the Burma state military (known as Tatmadaw) by forming guerilla units and basing themselves in temporary jungle camps on the Thai-Burma border. Following its principle of no surrender, the KNU continues despite a precarious state of existence. Nonetheless, their fight continues to garner the sympathy of the international community since the KNU represent the Karen people, one of the many ethnic nationalities of Burma that are experiencing ethnic cleansing under the military junta.

In January 2007, the commander of the KNLA 7th Brigade, Brigadier-General Htain Maung, announced the formation of a separate group, the Karen National Union/Karen National Liberation Army Peace Council (KNU/KNLAPC). This followed his reported negotiations with the SPDC, that did not have the sanction of the KNU leadership - which subsequently dismissed him. In February 2007 the SPDC announced that it had arranged a peace agreement with this group, which numbered some 300 fighters. In April 2007 the KNU/KNLAPC took part in joint operations with the DKBA and the state military/police, and attacked KNLA forces close to the Burma- Thailand border.

When the Asian Tribune was talking to many who are connected with the Karen rebellion one could see a clear ideological and tactical division between the KNU and KNLA.

In January 2008, Brigadier-General Htain Maung’s son-in-law, Colonel Ler Moo, was killed in a bomb attack near the KNU/KNLAPC’s headquarters. In February 2008, Mahn Sha, General Secretary of the KNU, was shot to death at his home in Mae Sot, Thailand possibly by the agents of DKBA

Ethnic Cleansing

For over two years the Burmese army has been waging a military offensive against ethnic Karen civilians in the eastern parts of the country. The ongoing offensive includes widespread and systematic violations of international human rights and humanitarian law, according to a Amnesty International report released 5 June 2008. The report describes these violations as crimes against humanity.

The report, Crimes against humanity in eastern Myanmar, says that nearly 150,000 people have been internally displaced in Kayin State and the eastern Bago Division. Many have also been subjected to unlawful killings; enforced disappearances; the imposition of forced labor, as well as the destruction of villages, crops and food-stocks and other forms of collective punishment.

Such violations have been directed at civilians, simply on account of their Karen ethnicity or location in Karen majority areas, or in retribution for activities by the Karen National Liberation Army.

Amnesty International has said that it is concerned that the violations are the result of official State Peace and Development Council (SPDC, the Burmese government) and tatmadaw policy. The organization has called for an immediate halt to all violations of international human rights and humanitarian law by government forces and aligned militias and for UN Security Council to impose a comprehensive mandatory arms embargo on Burma.

Burmese (or Myanmar) government has unleashed a seven point ethnic policy:

1. Destroying Villages: Many villages have been totally destroyed in an attempt to ensure that the ethnic Karenni residents do not return.

2. Looting and Burning: Thousands of houses, rice barns were burned to the ground and all the valuable things were looted including were looted from the Karenni villages

3. Detentions: There are consistent refugee reports that the Burmese army are separating military-aged men from their families in a systematic pattern for porters and later killed.

4. Summary Execution: Refugees have provided accounts of summary executions in towns and villages In addition to random executions; in Arakan area some were burned alive

5. Systematic Rape: Ethnic nationalities women are reportedly being raped in increasing numbers. Authenticated accounts of systematic and organized mass rapes in Shan, Karenni areas have already reported worldwide.

6. Poisoning the Water: All the streams and wells in the Karenni areas were poisoned so that not only men but also animals that drink the water may die.

7. Violations of Medical Neutrality: The apparent goal is to effectively deny health care to ethnic nationalities and extinguish the community base health care systems.

The Asian Tribune in its investigation learned that nine battalions of Burmese soldiers had been deliberately sent to the Karenni area to implement the ethnic cleansing, while at the same time blaring out the ‘7-point road map’ to democracy.

(The Second Part of this Investigative Report will be carried tomorrow)
- Asian Tribune -

http://www.asiantribune.com/?q=node/11920

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Myanmar continues to suffer after cyclone
Kishalay Bhattacharjee, Zokai, Laputta
Tuesday, June 24, 2008 (Yangon)
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Myanmar went through one of the subcontinent's biggest tragedies, but they kept journalists out, along with most international aid workers.

The official toll has reached tens of thousands, and the cyclone and its aftermath are still taking a toll on Burma.

And there is no one to tell the tale to the world. A glimpse of the disaster, through the eyes of a victim, who managed to smuggle out a tape on which he had recorded some of the tragedy tells the whole tale.

There are shocking things on the tape and what is even more shocking is that it is clearly just the tip of the iceberg.

Remnants of nature's fury that hit Burma on the May 2. These are the shell-shocked victims through the eyes of another victim, who recorded the tragedies the cyclone left behind.

In Laputa, near Yangon, everything is gone from pagodas to schools. The relief camps that were set up during the floods that followed the cyclone have now been dismantled.

The military junta wants people to start rebuilding their lives now. But in the wake of the floods and loss there is a new horror visiting the victims.

Little girls orphaned by the disaster were sold to brothels in Thailand.

''We are worried about the human trafficking of the orphanage children and children. We got the information from Thailand-Burma border that children with families have arrived their looking for work but we have come to know that they are being sold in Thailand for prostitution,'' said Dr Thura, relief worker.

''We are worried they are being trafficked to Singapore and Malaysia for kidneys,'' Dr Thura added.

The Junta has told the world they do not need more aid but people are still leaving villages looking for food and work at the borders.

The debris and the dead have been piling up and so are shocking stories. In a disaster aftermath, it is usually food and medicines that has been offered as aid but the hundreds of children on the streets of Myanmar need security.

http://www.ndtv.com/convergence/ndtv/story.aspx?id=NEWEN20080054293

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