That's sort of what's going on right now. A little bit is happening: the aid is still going in as the aid groups are helping, and the UN is helping the local Rakhine government. Everything is in a state of suspended ghettoization. There are these ghettos that just kind of stumble through. Money comes from Rohingya in Malaysia, and other places. People depend on handouts from charity groups. People somehow piece together an existence, or don't. People die. Women die in childbirth because they can't go to the hospital because they are Rohingya. It is a state of nothing happening and the ghettoization is simply slowly killing people and making their lives miserable and making them want to leave. That is the situation in Arakan today.
There are small steps being taken to look at the longer-term solutions, and that's promising. But unless there continues to be pressure on the government, on the NLD and local officials, to come up with long-term solutions, the small efforts that are being made going to flag. This is why we always tell visiting officials that they should raise the longer-term issues of the Rohingya Muslims.
It is not only a humanitarian crisis; it's also this legal human rights crisis. There is also that business of Naypyidaw changing the underlying law, the 1982 law that deprived all these people of their citizenship in the first place.