Well, to me a lot of the challenges are a little bit like the way Europe was. I used to travel to Ukraine and other parts of the world. They always take you to the capital city. They show you the good things. They show you the hydro. They show you that everything works nicely and that everybody is living happily ever after, but they never let you outside of the capital.
So what you have now is that outside of the capital you have all these problems that are going on, and the thing is that we can't get in to document this. The UN has been trying to get in there over the last year now, and they've only been able to get in twice and in a little amount.... I mean, we're giving the UN millions of dollars to help the Kachin, but they can't get the resources there. They can't because these two mountain ranges on both sides have kept this country so closed, and the military regime has kept it so closed that it's very difficult to document.
I hope it doesn't become like a Kosovo, where 20 years later we have to go in, dig up all the graves, count all the human remains, and say that we think we might have had an atrocity there. I hope we don't have to get to that place. We may have to, but I don't know.
But the atrocities are going on and are being well documented. The sad part—I've left some other material—is that Britain's Parliament discussed this whole issue of genocide around 2000-and-something. It's well documented in the British archives that they declared it was genocide that was going on. They declared it in their House of Commons with their reports: it is genocide. But now, 20 years later, we're still discussing whether it is genocide, when we already have it passed, voted on, and everything else.
It's happening, but how to get that balance between the positive things that are taking place, which I'm excited about, and once you get outside the capital city, what do we do...? How do we bring about the democracy that I believe Aung San Suu Kyi wants to bring about and the rest of the world wants to have?
The problem you have is that you have two very large countries. China has made Myanmar its puppet. China controls almost 75% of the natural resources and the ownership of the dams—everything. They own it all. Right now there's an uprising going on even at this very hour concerning electricity, because for the dams that are being built, over 95% of the power is going back to China.
So the people themselves get no benefits from these resources—from the gold, the uranium, and the platinum. All these wonderful things are going outside the country. The people themselves are getting little of it. That's the dichotomy we're struggling with. I'm not sure if I've answered your question completely, but....