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![]() COMMENTARY
Being alive or dead is not much different in Burma, as strange as that sounds. Six weeks after Cyclone Nargis, alive or dead, no one has dignity under the military government’s rule. When people are alive, all their basic rights are stolen. When they die, their bodies are just ignored. Bloated bodies still lie scattered about, floating in streams or caught in trees in the worst-hit Irrawaddy delta, say aid workers. The junta officially estimated that 134,000 people are dead or missing following the cyclone. The actual death toll is believed to be much higher. Relatively few bodies were buried by villagers. Most of the dead have been ignored. The government still has not set up a systematic process to collect and cremate the bodies properly. Victims’ bodies decomposed without religious rites. Yet international and local aid workers and supplies are still being shunned by the callous generals. In the latest outrage, three Burmese volunteer aid workers were arrested in Rangoon last week by the special branch police. Police told the families that Yin Yin Wie, Tin Tin Cho and Myat Thu were detained because of their efforts to gather donations from friends abroad to aid the refugees. The detainees had voluntarily supplied rice, medicine and clothes to refugees since the May 2-3 cyclone struck. Two weeks ago, the well-known Burmese comedian Zarganar, a strong critic of the regime, was arrested. Zarganar and his team distributed food, blankets, mosquito nets and other aid which they collected from donors. One of his colleagues, Zaw Thet Htawe, was arrested on Friday. After the arrests, another colleague told The Irrawaddy that the Zarganar team has temporarily suspended its aid activities. Last week, a small group of foreign doctors that had been allowed to work in the delta began to leave after the junta closed down most of the refugee centers. The Thai government was told not to dispatch a third medical team.
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