This is the campaign for Support CRPH (Citizen of Burma Award Organization Inc): https://charity.gofundme.com/o/en/ca...urce=crowdrise
Mayanmar - Please help them
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I will - for what it's worth. At least some humanitarian aid, I suppose, but what an awful situation. No help for those already massacred.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostI will - for what it's worth. At least some humanitarian aid, I suppose, but what an awful situation. No help for those already massacred.
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Thank you FF. I have a close friend in Mayanmar with whom I talk daily. For the last two calls I could hear gunfire outside her house and she had to terminate last call due to "Teary Gas" (as she calls it!) drifting in. She reports even more insidious actions than reach the news here: medical workers and funeral processions being fired on, takeaway food delivery drivers being forced to deliver meals that the military have poisoned and so on. She's only 19 and her and her young friends have been raising money to help families whose homes have been destroyed or who have lost loved ones. What a nightmare! And bloody Russia and China supporting all this!!
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Originally posted by Frances_iom View PostThe Russian government have offered their support to the military - after all they have the experienced manpower now that Syria has been dealt with. But recall that China demonstrated its love of democracy by killing many of its youth by the army in the middle of Beijing - there will be little chance of any return even to a semblance of democracy.
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Originally posted by Lordgeous View PostThank you FF. I have a close friend in Mayanmar with whom I talk daily. For the last two calls I could hear gunfire outside her house and she had to terminate last call due to "Teary Gas" (as she calls it!) drifting in. She reports even more insidious actions than reach the news here: medical workers and funeral processions being fired on, takeaway food delivery drivers being forced to deliver meals that the military have poisoned and so on. She's only 19 and her and her young friends have been raising money to help families whose homes have been destroyed or who have lost loved ones. What a nightmare! And bloody Russia and China supporting all this!!
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Originally posted by ahinton View Post... but China is quite another matter. I suspect that it is poised to observe the country falling apart completely and then it might move in to get rid of any supporters of democracy and tell the military what to do, effectively taking it over altogether;....
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Originally posted by Frances_iom View PostThe Chinese seem to find it difficult to handle large numbers of non-Han people so I suspect the attraction of a satrapy run by the military who seem very willing to kill their own people might well be attractive - it can then be run as slave labour camp as China will in future be short of labour thanks to its enforced one-child policy.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostChina is not exactly short of low-cost labour to exploit within its own borders. Recent reports have implied that it is somewhat less 'Gung-ho' than Russia, where the Myanma coup is concerned.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostChina's apparent comparative taciturnity is, I suspect, all about keeping its powder dry until needed and about timing for any future invasive action; China might also have decided that its interests might best be served by keeping its own counsel until Myanmar has deteiorated to a sufficient degree to enable it to move on it - speculation only, I know, but there's no smoke without fire, I fear...
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Originally posted by Frances_iom View PostThe Russian government have offered their support to the military - after all they have the experienced manpower now that Syria has been dealt with. But recall that China demonstrated its love of democracy by killing many of its youth by the army in the middle of Beijing - there will be little chance of any return even to a semblance of democracy.
I was never too fond of 1984 as a book, but I think it spots quite a number of political "practices".
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I will make a contribution. My wife's cousin in Germany is involved with a Myanmar childrens' aid charity and in 2011 we went with her to take a look at their work and do some tourism. A good time to go. People so friendly and all still very open. We even got to the fascinating Buddhist sites in Mrauk U in the Rakhine state. Still in touch with our guide who now has almost no work as such but luckily they still have a family-run restaurant. He has been on street protests in Bagan.
Our last big foreign tour was Ethiopia in 2014. All was peaceful and it's appalling to read about what is happening there now. In the city of Axum in the northern Tigray region atrocities have taken place in the very holy places we visited. https://apnews.com/article/witnesses...68409bd1d20bfaLast edited by gurnemanz; 29-03-21, 14:15.
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