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"Think of the trouble and bitterness they will have to go through," he said. Nor is the government in a rush to shift the missing into the column of the dead, Zhang said. With the passage of time, the focus is on reconstruction, and many survivors are looking to the future. "I'm not able to speak on behalf of the government, but declaring death is not a priority when they're making public policy, nor is it urgent," Zhang said. For those with missing relatives, there is no right or wrong decision Wednesday, said Marlene Lee, a clinical psychologist in Singapore who spent a month in Sichuan after the quake as a volunteer with Doctors Without Borders. She recalled a man who saw boulders come down the shaking mountainside and crush the construction site where his wife was working. He couldn't dig her out, but he knew she was there. He was able to start moving on, she said. "The fact there is a huge number of similar losses is one factor for people to make sense of what happened," Lee said. "I do have to say I think the people are very, very resilient, focused on helping each other and making sense of things."
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