If one were wondering what business millions of Burmese had in what was once an uninhabited mangrove swamp typical of the Irrawaddy delta (which cyclone Nargis tore through effortlessly), one again needs to look back to a country's colonialist past.
From the Times:
Before the mid-19th century, the area was a thinly inhabited swamp. But the British colonial rulers saw this as an ideal place to cultivate rice and help feed their empire. They built dikes and drained the land. In the twilight years of British rule, colonial Burma was the world’s largest rice exporter, and millions of Burmese moved here to cultivate the rich alluvial soil. The government says that 6.3 million people lived in the delta before the storm.
Showing posts with label Nargis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nargis. Show all posts
Friday, May 16, 2008
Friday, May 09, 2008
Annals of true feelings...
More than a quarter of a million are dead or missing. I was somehow struck by the headline below - sounded too frivolous, too clichéd, too clinical... (maybe it is just me)...
From wikipedia: The phrase perfect storm is borrowed from the 1997 book The Perfect Storm. The phrase refers to the simultaneous occurrence of events which, taken individually, would be far less powerful than the result of their chance combination. Such occurrences are rare by their very nature, so that even a slight change in any one event contributing to the perfect storm would lessen its overall impact.
From wikipedia: The phrase perfect storm is borrowed from the 1997 book The Perfect Storm. The phrase refers to the simultaneous occurrence of events which, taken individually, would be far less powerful than the result of their chance combination. Such occurrences are rare by their very nature, so that even a slight change in any one event contributing to the perfect storm would lessen its overall impact.

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