More than a month after the devastating March 28 earthquake, exhausted relief workers in Mandalay and nearby areas continue to toil in difficult conditions that have left some of them traumatised. We hear from relief workers who have been deeply affected by the death and suffering around them.
BY Frontier
More than a month after the devastating March 28 earthquake, exhausted relief workers in Mandalay and nearby areas continue to toil in difficult conditions that have left some of them traumatised. We hear from relief workers who have been deeply affected by the death and suffering around them.
BY Frontier
An early pledge by the parallel National Unity Government to replace Myanmar’s racist citizenship law raised hopes for marginalised communities, but impatience is growing as revolutionary groups trade blame for the delays.
BY Frontier
Ko Min said he found his son and daughter's bodies in the ruins of a schoolhouse in central Myanmar, moments after a deadly airstrike that witnesses said came as a military jet circled the village.
BY AFP
Consider being a Frontier Member.
Support independent journalism in Myanmar. Become a Frontier member today
Support more independent journalism like this.
One of the most important events in the Buddhist calendar leaves a bus traveller with time to count lots of hats.
Support more independent journalism like this.
BY Ben Dunant
Drivers visit a famous shrine on Yangon’s outskirts to propitiate its nat in the belief it will protect them in business and on the roads.
BY Su Myat Mon
The UN slammed Friday India's deportation of seven Rohingya men to Myanmar despite warnings they could face persecution.
BY AFP
ထိုင်းနိုင်ငံတွင် မြန်မာရွှေ့ပြောင်းလုပ်သားများ ခေါင်းပုံဖြတ်ခံရမှု ရပ်တန့်သွားစေရေးအတွက် ထိုင်းအစိုးရက ဥပဒေပြဌာန်းထားသော်လည်း ခေါင်းပုံဖြတ်မှုအမြတ်ထုတ်မှုများ ရှိနေဆဲဖြစ်သည်
အေအက်ဖ်ပီ
BY AFP
Support more independent journalism like this.
BY AFP
As the influential distilleries industry opposes lifting an import ban, the illegal trade in whisky and other spirits is estimated to be costing at least US$13 million annually in lost tax revenue.
BY Kyaw Ye Lynn
For 50 years, successive Myanmar governments have banned the import of foreign liquor but the only beneficiary has been the black market.
Latest Issue
Stories in this issue
Become a Frontier Member
Support our independent journalism and get exclusive behind-the-scenes content and analysis
Get exclusive daily updates
Stay on top of Myanmar current affairs with our Daily Briefing and Media Monitor newsletters.
Join the community
Sign up for our Frontier Fridays newsletter. It’s a free weekly round-up featuring the most important events shaping Myanmar