Hello...I thought I'd post a brief update on what we are up to here in Myanmar....and what we have been able to accomplish during the past 13 days...
We now have dependable Internet service in our room...NOT always available here...three local SIM cards for our hand phones ...and while they do not allow us to make outgoing International Calls...they do allow us to communicate with other team members and our local NGO partners......Our Biz Cards are now in English / Myanmar / Burmese...We have car with reasonable air conditioning and a very good driver who understands English and actually knows where he is going....We also have some VERY good local contacts thanks to our good friends Chris C and Steve R...and three vetted, well organized local NGO partners and some cash which has been converted in to the local currency ready for our swoop thru the area.
Today we bought a truck load of food, medicines, clothing and other urgently needed items that we will deliver tomorrow to very dedicated young local couple who run a small orphanage with 19 children just outside Yangon...we met them through some good friends in the Philippines.
This coming Saturday we will be buying the first 6 Water Buffalo for a local version of The Buffalo Bank that we assisted setting up in the Philippines in 2002.
Next Saturday, July 5 th we have been invited to join another local NGO we have partnered with as they go into the devastated area to provide food to approx 2,500 people.
All in all I feel that we have done pretty well considering the real time situation that exists here.
Once again we have accomplished more with less.
Thank you for your interest in what we are trying to do here in Myanmar and elsewhere around the world...IF you are interested in supporting these efforts financially you can make a donation online thru Pay Pal on our website located at www.kbi.org or by sending a check made out to:
Knightsbridge International,
PO Box 4394
West Hills, CA 91308-4394
Ed Artis-Yangon, Myanmar
Wednesday June 25, 2008
PS....The Photos that I have posted were taken in the small office that we have set up in our hotel in Yangon.
Wednesday, June 25, 2008
Tuesday, June 17, 2008
KI Humanitarian Mission to Myanmar
We currently have a small advance team working in Myanmar going through the process by which the required approvals are granted for any organization to be allowed to work in this country.
It is not a complicated process if you know someone who has been working here before and we have been lucky enough to meet a couple people here who have agreed to open some doors for us whereby we have been able to get our application before the decision makers within the first five days after our arrival. We should have a decision within the next five to seven days.
Unfortunatey there are a great many NGOs here, both large and small going through this process now and many of them are of the opinion that these approvals should simply be given with zero review or application process. This is like no other place in the world where we have worked...it is their way or no way...and trying to force the issue only sends you into a slot where you will be stuck waiting in your Hotel for...in some cases a month or more.
Great people here and I am optimistic that we will know very soon what future, IF ANY we may have here.
Sir Edward Artis
Yangon, Myanmar
It is not a complicated process if you know someone who has been working here before and we have been lucky enough to meet a couple people here who have agreed to open some doors for us whereby we have been able to get our application before the decision makers within the first five days after our arrival. We should have a decision within the next five to seven days.
Unfortunatey there are a great many NGOs here, both large and small going through this process now and many of them are of the opinion that these approvals should simply be given with zero review or application process. This is like no other place in the world where we have worked...it is their way or no way...and trying to force the issue only sends you into a slot where you will be stuck waiting in your Hotel for...in some cases a month or more.
Great people here and I am optimistic that we will know very soon what future, IF ANY we may have here.
Sir Edward Artis
Yangon, Myanmar
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