The Karen tribe-nation, not the supermarket tabloid Karen. -Bob

Jolie, Pitt visit Myanmar 
refugees in Thai camp
Fri Feb 6, 2:21 pm ET

BANGKOK 
(AFP) – Hollywood star couple 
Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt visited Myanmar refugees in a Thai camp, including 
one woman who had been there for more than two decades, the UN said 
Friday.

Jolie, a goodwill ambassador for the UN refugee agency, spent 
Wednesday in Thailand with Pitt, meeting refugees at the northern Ban Mai Nai 
Soi camp.

"I was saddened to meet a 21-year-old woman who was born in a 
refugee camp, who has never even been out of the camp and is now raising her 
own 
child in a camp," the UN High Commissioner for Refugees reported Jolie as 
saying.

The camp, three kilometres (two miles) from the Myanmar border, 
is home to more than 18,000 mainly ethnic Karen refugees who have no freedom of 
movement and are not allowed outside to seek work or higher 
education.

They fled crackdowns on ethnic rebel armies in military-ruled 
Myanmar.

"With no foreseeable chance that these refugees will soon be 
able to return to Burma, we must find some way to help them work and become 
self 
reliant," Jolie said, referring to Myanmar by its previous name.

Jolie 
previously visited the camp in 2004 and wanted to return to show her partner 
Pitt, UNHCR spokeswoman Kitty McKinsey said.

Ban Mai Nai Soi is the third 
largest of nine refugee camps in northern Thailand housing a total of 111,000 
registered refugees.

Most refugees are from Myanmar's ethnic groups, 
including many Christians from the Karen minority.

Jolie urged Thai 
authorities to speed up the processing of 5,000 migrants who arrived in Mae 
Hong 
Son province in 2006 and 2007 after fighting across the border in Myanmar's 
Kayah state.

Her visit comes with Thailand in the spotlight for its 
treatment of ethnic Rohingya migrants arriving on its southern shores from 
Myanmar's north.

The Thai military is accused of pushing hundreds of the 
migrants back to sea in rickety boats without adequate food and water -- a 
charge it categorically denies.

Jolie said the fair treatment of refugees 
in the northern camps "makes me hope that Thailand will be just as generous to 
the Rohingya refugees who are now arriving on their shores."

Indian solar lanterns to light 
up Myanmar huts 

Nay Pyi Taw (Myanmar), Feb 7 
(PTI): Indian solar lanterns will 
light up more houses of the poor in Myanmar, in areas devastated by killer 
storm 
Nargis in May last year. 

India handed over 250 solar lanterns to Myanmar 
yesterday, with Minister of State for Defence M M Pallam Raju handing over 
nearly two of them to Social Welfare and Rehabilitation Minister Maj Gen Maung 
Maung as a symbolic gesture on the first day of Vice President Hamid Ansari's 
four-day visit to this country. 

The lanterns were given on a request 
from Myanmar following good feedback on the performance of 500 such lanterns, 
supplied by India soon after the cyclone struck this country killing more than 
one lakh people.

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