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Only a few kilometers from the epicenter of Myanmar's devastating earthquake
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locals rush to line up for relief supplies. But the aid is barely enough to meet people's needs
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We haven't received anything except some packets of rice and curry and water as we queue
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I haven't gotten anything I need so far. I put my name down on the list
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We need drinking water. We have nothing. Many people still need fuel or mosquito nets for emergency shelters and camps
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since their houses have been destroyed or damaged. Some earthquake relief workers and volunteers say the military junta
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is deliberately obstructing the delivery of supplies. Some of the supplies of aid, well, most of it, was not given to the people who need it
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In some areas in Mandalay, the aid did not arrive. The aid was confiscated by the military junta
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On top of these allegations, an anti-junta rebel group, the Karen National Union
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say Myanmar's military regime continued airstrikes on civilian areas right after Friday's earthquake
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Junta leader Min An Lang says defensive operations are necessary to prevent ethnic armed groups from organizing future attacks
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drawing the ire of international NGOs and Myanmar's UN human rights rapporteur
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The focus in Myanmar must be on saving lives, not taking them
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Junta military attacks must stop. Obstructions to aid must be lifted. On Thursday, Myanmar's information ministry said that last week's 7.7 magnitude earthquake
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has claimed over 3,000 lives, but local media sources report the number of casualties is much higher