Rev. Danny Fisher

Just a Buddhist Minister Trying to Benefit Beings

AP: Burmese Bloggers Join in Ad Hoc Cyclone Relief Efforts

Via the U.S. Campaign for Burma: The Associated Press is reporting that Burmese bloggers are playing a special role as ad hoc relief efforts are formed in their country.

    Bloggers may find their messages blocked by Myanmar’s military regime, but that hasn’t stopped Nyi Lynn Seck from raising tens of thousands of dollars for cyclone survivors through his website.

    The 29-year-old IT specialist and his friends are getting their hands dirty and putting the donations to work by helping to build “Budget Huts” in the Irrawaddy River delta, a region still reeling from the May 2-3 Tropical Cyclone Nargis.

    Days after the storm hit, Nyi Lynn Seck traveled from Yangon, the principal city, to the delta to document survivors’ stories. He posted their accounts and his photographs on his Web journal.

    “I have been blogging for quite a long time and many overseas Myanmar citizens read it. They wanted me to go to the delta and help out,” he said.

    Nyi Lynn Seck quit his job as a manager at a software company to lead six volunteers, including four other bloggers, on a mission to aid villages near the town of Labutta. They have been here since May 9.

    He is an example of a grass-roots movement that has emerged in Myanmar, also known as Burma. Many of those doing private relief work are highly critical of the government response to the disaster.

    Private efforts have filled some gaps in the relief effort, especially in the early weeks after the storm, when the government turned back most foreign relief workers. After pleas from the United Nations, the ruling generals agreed to accept international aid, but it still limits the activities of foreigners in the country.

    Nyi Lynn Seck said most of the $30,000 received by the group came from Burmese expatriates in Thailand, Singapore and Malaysia, but that money had come in from as far as Europe.

    Myanmar’s government, which strictly controls media, including the Internet, blocks most blogging sites. However, they are sometimes accessible by using a server that masks the site’s true origin.

    Bloggers played a major role in ensuring the free flow of information during anti-government protests in Myanmar last fall and the violent crackdown that followed. At least one blogger, Nay Phone Latt, remains in prison.

    Nyi Lynn Seck’s blog has included personal observations, advice for would-be bloggers and news items. It has not been seen as anti-government.

    Nyi Lynn Seck said he became an aid worker because he thought the government’s response to the storm, which killed 78,000 people and left 56,000 missing, was inefficient.

    “The government doesn’t rely much on a system or technology and they don’t know what to do. They work only on paper, so the help was really delayed,” he said.

    Nyi Lynn Seck picked up his black leather laptop case and pulled out a stack of slides he shows to would-be donors. He also has two models of shelters, dubbed “Budget Huts,” made of wood and plastic.

    The group, which calls itself Handy Myanmar Youths because it wants to lend a hand to survivors, has put up 88 huts in delta villages.

    Such volunteerism is not always welcomed by the government. A popular comedian was taken from his Yangon home by police this month after going to the delta to help survivors.

    Many Myanmar volunteers and the local staff of foreign aid agencies pack their vehicles with food, water and other supplies when heading into the delta; several have been harassed by police or their vehicles have been impounded.

    Nyi Lynn Seck said the government approved his group’s project after they detailed their plans to authorities in Labutta and declared that no foreigners were directly involved.

    The group makes five-to- six-hour trips by boat to coastal villages to deliver materials and tools to build the huts and supervise the construction, which is done mostly by survivors.

    Because of the tides, the volunteers are unable to return to Labutta on the same day, so they usually spend at least one night sleeping on the bare ground without shelter from mosquitoes. Several have fallen ill.

    The blogger said the group’s most pressing concerns were about sustaining the project despite the high price of materials and transportation.

    “Now the biggest problem is that we’re having trouble finding wood in Labutta, and the wood is also getting very expensive,” Nyi Lynn Seck said.

    “As long as there are funds and donors, hopefully we can keep this up for another two to three months here,” he said. “But I’m not so sure about the future.”

A Sneak Peek at Frontline’s Upcoming "Jesus in China"

AP: Protests in Kathmandu Over Olympic Torch’s Relay Through Tibet

Robert Barnett Interview at the New York Times

Via our friend Erick: Columbia University’s Robert Barnett, a preeminent Tibet scholar, was interviewed at the New York TimesRings blog about the Olympic torch relay. Do take a look.

The Washington Post: Frustrated Burmese Organize Ad Hoc Aid Groups

This from the Washington Post Foreign Service:

    Seven weeks after huge swaths of Burma were savaged by a cyclone and tidal wave, a new and remarkable citizen movement is delivering emergency supplies to survivors neglected by the military government’s haphazard relief effort.

    The scores of ad hoc Burmese groups, many of them based here in the country’s largest city, are not overtly political. But they are reviving a kind of social activism that has been largely repressed by successive military rulers here.

    Defying roadblocks and bureaucratic obstruction, volunteers have reached devastated villages in many parts of the Irrawaddy Delta, dropping off food, drinking water and other essentials and bringing back photos that contradict claims in the state media that life is returning to normal.

    Some members of the groups say they hope to keep working together when the cyclone damage is finally repaired and turn toward other activities that carry shades of political activism in this tightly controlled state.

    With residents’ frustration over the official relief effort mounting, pledges of support and donations to the National League for Democracy, the main opposition group in Burma, also called Myanmar, have doubled since the cyclone, according to a student leader of the league.

    [...]

    The informal organizations are often based on occupation. Artists, doctors, students and the gem dealers have formed separate groups. In other cases, the groups are made up of friends coming together to help.

    [...]

    Since the cyclone, three people have been arrested on charges of taking photographs of the cyclone-ravaged areas and sending them to foreign news sites, and one person for marching to the offices of the U.N. Development Program to complain about government neglect, according to a lawyer monitoring their cases.

    Though some private groups are keeping up their relief efforts, others are running out of steam — and money.

Take a look at the whole piece for personal stories and profiles of particular persons offering aid.

(The above photo is from the New York Times.)

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