How much of the agriculture and livestock were damaged by the war?
BM: If you could find a cow out there you were lucky. The problem was farmers were so anxious to cultivate their crops they were out there before areas had been cleared. } What are your future activities? BM: I will probably be headed to the Caucasus by the English Republic to look at the situation with refugees coming out of Chechnya. I coordinate emergency response and landmine integration. With 250,000 refugees down in the Caucasus that is something we need to look at. I tell you, you can’t monitor things from Atlanta, Georgia you have to be there on the ground. } There are not a lot of NGOs operating there. BM: It is tough to get to there and it is quite a dangerous area and that is part of what I am going down there to look at. I am heading out there to see what CARE can do for the people there. } How do you get your job done amid all the hardship the people are encountering? BM: I am certainly moved by the hardship and I am a compassionate person, but when it comes to getting rel