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
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The labour ministry’s new 1,000 kyat “allowance” skirts minimum wage law requirements at a time when the military’s mishandling of the economy has drastically shrunk workers’ purchasing power.
BY Frontier
Opponents of Myanmar's junta use drone attacks to challenge the military's dominance of the skies through its Russian- and Chinese-built jets and helicopters.
BY AFP
A migrant worker from central Myanmar tells Frontier how he fled Laukkai as war closed in on the town bordering China, bringing with it death, destruction and allegations of forced recruitment.
BY Frontier
Coming into effect last week, United States sanctions on the Myanma Oil and Gas Enterprise won’t hit as hard as they could have, but they will still shrink the junta’s coffers while avoiding harm to the wider economy.
BY Frontier
The resistance has seized a series of towns in recent months, marking a clear escalation in the war to overthrow the military regime, but questions remain about the viability of the strategy.
BY Frontier
The military regime needs foreign allies to survive, but as gas and other resources dry up, it has little to offer them in return.
BY Frontier
Being displaced by conflict is a devastating experience, and there are about two million internally displaced people in Myanmar now. But what happens when there's nowhere to run to?
BY Frontier
Mines are being dug across Tanintharyi Region amid a collapse in environmental regulation and the chaos of armed conflict, with minerals exported to Thailand and China.
BY Frontier
Myanmar became the world's biggest producer of opium in 2023, overtaking Afghanistan after the Taliban government's crackdown on the trade, according to a United Nations report released today.
BY AFP
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