Posted by: SnowSpark on: June 7, 2008
NOTE : 18+ Content
Animation says more than Words… ![]()
Posted by: SnowSpark on: May 28, 2008

I made this considering my blog is a Artistic, Spiritual and Peaceful place, as the pic above says it all.
I Love my blog
If any of ya want this header image i can provide the pic (You can simply copy the above pic) its 760X151 px or for the ones who wanna modify it according to themselves i can provide the .PSD file, just gimme a buzz.
Posted by: SnowSpark on: May 27, 2008
Posted by: SnowSpark on: May 24, 2008
Three weeks after the killer Cyclone Nargis devastated parts of Burma, the stench from rotting corpses pervades the air. Bloated corpses still float in the creeks and rivers.
The rotting corpses are scattered in Haingyi, Pyapon, Laputta and Bogale Townships in Irrawaddy Division. Bodies are yet to be buried and the stench is unbearable, voluntary relief workers who are operating in these areas said.
“Corpses stink along the river front in many villages in Dadeye Township across Pyapon,” a resident of Rangoon into relief work in Pyapon area said.
Similarly corpses are still floating in Myitkyin, Myittan, Achergyi, Acherlay, Leiktalan Chaung, Swetawgone, Layeintan, Seiklaygone, Dadarkyaung, Myaseinge and Kunhmong villages just across Pyapon.
“We found 14 to 15 corpses in some places. About four or five corpses are floating in a pond. Some corpses are trapped on land. Almost all fishermen in Myitkyin and Myittan villages near Pyapon died in the cyclone. The foul smell is unbearable in these villages,” he added.
Bodies are still found in Koenikyaung and Ganan villages in the river and on land. We don’t know what will happen to our health,” a monk who helped in relief work in these areas said.
“The scene of corpses scattered in the villages in Laputta Township is horrible. The corpses have maggots crawling all over them. The bodies are piled up in some places with four or five corpses in each place. I don’t know the name of these villages. All have been destroyed,” a relief worker said.
Another relief worker in Chaungwa, Kanseik, Sekseik, Pyinseik and Sarkone villages in Pyinkhayine near Haigyi Island said the situation is the same in these areas.
Cholera outbreak has been reported in these areas. A woman and many children are afflicted, but there are no reports of death yet, he added.
“Due to lack of potable water and hygienic food, the people are prone to waterborne diseases such as diarrhoea, typhoid and Hepatitis A,” a relief medical doctor said.
“The foul smell creates nausea and vomiting, uneasiness and dizziness. And it is not good for heart and asthma patients,” he added.
In some villages, the surviving relatives of the dead buried them.
Posted by: SnowSpark on: May 24, 2008

A girl lying on the floor has diarrhea while the girl in her mothers arm has dengue. Many storm victims have diarrhea for lack of clean water.



A private donor distributes aid to communities near Dadaeye. Many villagers now amass on the roadside to await private aid, with official assistance unable to sufficiently cover their needs.
—>Please Donate them<—
Donate via Google to UNICEF or Direct Relief International
Donate via International Federation of Red Cross & Red Crescent Societies
Posted by: SnowSpark on: May 24, 2008
Posted by: SnowSpark on: May 23, 2008

There is only one major road leading to Naypyidaw. Nearly three years ago, when Burma’s new capital was carved out of scrubland, the country’s ruling military junta gave no reason for its sudden abandonment of the bustling city of Rangoon. Then, shortly after thousands of civil servants were forced to move to an isolated construction site in the middle of nowhere, a secret government document leaked to local journalists. Junta leader Than Shwe outlined his fears of an invasion by the U.S. and lauded Naypyidaw’s superior defensive position compared to the former capital: mountains on one flank, distance from the sea and limited road access. The only vulnerability to this bunker city was from the air. But even here, Naypyidaw has been blessed. When Cyclone Nargis devastated Rangoon and the nearby Irrawaddy river delta on May 2 and 3, killing perhaps 100,000 people and leaving as many as 2 million others fighting for their lives, the new capital escaped unscathed.
Before Nargis struck Burma, also known as Myanmar, no one outside the paranoid clique of Burmese generals imagined that foreign agents would be attacking anytime soon. But as the junta blocked foreign aid for cyclone victims and provided little relief of its own, some outside Burma considered a radical solution: a unilateral intervention to save Burma’s beleaguered citizens. “I want to register my deep concern and immense frustration at the unacceptably slow response to this grave humanitarian crisis,” said U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon. French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner referred to the U.N.’s “responsibility to protect” and hinted that international action should be taken to ensure that relief reached those who needed it. David Cameron, the leader of Britain’s opposition Conservatives, called any further foot-dragging by the Burmese leadership “a crime against humanity.”
Cyclone Nargis can’t be blamed on Burma’s leaders. But their inaction has indeed been murderous. A week and a half after the storm inundated the Irrawaddy delta with a 12-foot-high tidal surge, flattening countless homes, the junta was still blocking much of the aid proffered by foreign nations. Although three U.S. military cargo planes were allowed to offload relief supplies in Rangoon, the World Food Program estimates that the amount of aid reaching storm victims is just a fraction of what’s needed. Hundreds of international disaster experts are still awaiting visas to enter the country. Meanwhile, the junta’s own relief efforts are painfully inadequate, with some army trucks delivering only rotting rice. Those who received the spoiled food are the lucky ones. In village after remote village that I visited in the flooded delta, no government officials had come to assess the damage, much less bring desperately needed food, water or shelter. Blackened, bloated corpses floated in rivers, the putrid smell of rotting flesh permeating the air. Yet few people seemed to hold any expectations that their leaders would help anytime soon. It is a remarkable accomplishment by the junta to have set the bar for competence so low that resignation reigns as the prospect of slow starvation mounts.
Ruling by Intimidation
For years, Burma’s ruling military has filled its state-run media with rants against the West. Even after the storm, the government’s mouthpiece, the New Light of Myanmar newspaper, demanded vigilance from the Burmese against “foreign nations interfering in internal affairs of the state” and “stooges holding negative views.”
Fear pervades Burma. San San Khing, a rice farmer from Kaw Hmu township, told me how the torrent of water stole away her 1-year-old daughter. The mother managed to hold on to her 5-year-old son, but by the time the tidal surge receded 12 hours later, his body was lifeless. Sitting in a refugee camp not far from her destroyed home, though, San San Khing showed little despair. Twice, her eyes welled up, but she blinked back her tears. Her children were gone. She had no money or food. Yet the terror of talking to a foreign journalist seemed to trump any grief. Burma’s leaders, backed by a 450,000-strong military, could do terrible things to her for speaking out.
I had gotten a glimpse of the military’s power just 20 minutes before meeting San San Khing, when I was stopped at one of several checkpoints designed to keep out foreign journalists and aid workers without proper government permits. A polite immigration officer took down my passport details, as well as the name and address of my local driver. His colleague told me that the cyclone had blown down his house. Their demeanor was apologetic — as if they were embarrassed to follow orders that kept their wounded country closed. Then an army jeep screeched up to the checkpoint. A major jumped out, screaming at the two guards. Apparently some foreign aid workers had slipped past the checkpoint. How could the officers have let that happen? The major turned to my driver and continued to rant: How could he bring foreigners to this disaster area? Doing so showed his complete abdication of patriotic duty. The major warned that he would be reporting my driver’s serious violation back to military headquarters. The clampdown was even more chilling near the riverside town of Laputta, where soldiers told villagers that any foreigners seen wandering around after dark would be shot, according to an aid agency operating locally.
In Burma today, the overwhelming sense is that the regime is more concerned with keeping foreigners out than allowing aid in. But unless international relief arrives quickly, the death toll of Cyclone Nargis will skyrocket. Already, disease is beginning to stalk makeshift refugee camps set up in monasteries and schools. In Laputta, 58 refugee camps have been set up for tens of thousands of dazed villagers who have nowhere else to go; the local hospital reports that one-quarter of new patients have diarrhea, a potential harbinger of killer epidemics. A Rangoon doctor says his hospital has run out of fully trained medical staff and is now sending interns to the disaster scene. International health officials warn that as many people could perish in the aftermath of the storm as from the cyclone itself. “I’ve had long experience of emergencies and I’ve never seen anything like this,” says Julio Sosa Calo, head of mission in Laputta for the German relief group Malteser International. “What we’re doing now is too little compared to the need.” To make matters worse, an International Red Cross ship laden with aid, the first to be allowed into Burma, sank when it hit a submerged tree in the Irrawaddy delta. And by the middle of this month, seasonal monsoons are expected to further inundate the region. What will happen then to those hundreds of thousands of people with no shelter? “We’re in 2008, not 1908,” says Jan Egeland, the U.N.’s former emergency-relief coordinator. “If we let [the junta] get away with murder, we may set a very dangerous precedent.”
Posted by: SnowSpark on: May 22, 2008
QINGCHUAN, Sichuan, May 20 (Xinhua) — Nearly 9,000 people in a quake zone were evacuated on Tuesday for fear that huge cracks on a mountain could lead to further disasters.
Many crevices, measuring up to 1,500 meters long, 250 m high and 50 centimeters wide, have been spotted on the Shiziliang Mountain in the Qingchuan County seat, Guangyuan City, since Sunday, threatening about 50,000 people and quake-relief soldiers.
Part of the mountain, distorted in the 8.0-magnitude earthquake and many aftershocks over the past week, has sunk about 1 meter and caused many road works to cave in.
A house at the foot of the mountain was damaged by a falling boulder.
Any new aftershock or heavy rainfall in the area could trigger serious landslides and cause casualties, according to the quake relief headquarters at the site.
The local government on Tuesday launched an emergency evacuation of 9,000 residents near the mountain. The area has been cordoned off and is under round-the-clock monitoring.
Posted by: SnowSpark on: May 21, 2008



