
Scavenging for food amid conflict
'Another day has gone, and I have to struggle again for another day,' fruit vendor Kyaw Win Shein said in the town of Mrauk U in Myanmar's Rakhine state.
'It is getting worse day by day,' said the 60-year-old, whose business is faltering as prices rise and incomes drop – a grim equation driving others to scour the countryside for sustenance.
Rakhine state – a riverine slice of coastal Myanmar bordering Bangladesh – has witnessed intense suffering in Myanmar's civil war, triggered by a 2021 coup deposing the democratic government.
As the military fights an ethnic armed group, it has blockaded the territory – throttling supplies to its estimated population of 2.5 million.
The impoverished state has long been a focus of international aid organisations, but worldwide cutbacks spearheaded by US President Donald Trump's 'America First' freeze on humanitarian funding have forced them to retreat.
The World Food Programme (WFP) – which received nearly half its 2024 donations from the United States – warned last week that 57% of families in central Rakhine are now unable to meet basic food needs.
The figure had risen from just 33% in December.
'A deadly combination of conflict, blockades and funding cuts is driving a dramatic rise in hunger and malnutrition,' the WFP said.
In northern Rakhine areas such as Mrauk U – where conflict complicates data collection – the WFP warned that the situation is 'much worse'.
Residents said that fertiliser is scarce, reducing crop yields and making produce unaffordable, driving people to desperate measures in a tightening spiral of misery.
'I am not the only one who has difficulties,' said Shein. 'Everyone is the same.'
In the village of Ponnagyun, a short distance from the state capital Sittwe, at the mouth of a delta opening onto the Bay of Bengal, many of its residents are starving.
Rakhine cuisine is famed for its fresh, simply cooked seafood, and fish is still on sale in markets.
But people have no cash to buy it.
'People are starving in my village,' said one resident who runs a Ponnagyun payphone shop, but asked to remain anonymous for security reasons.
'People find and eat bamboo shoots mostly,' he said. 'People can eat it, but it's not nutritious.'
He said only two aid handouts reached their community in the past year.
The conflict blockade is so effective that currency notes are not leaving the state to be replaced with new ones for circulation, and are instead left crumbling from wear and tear in the pockets of customers and vendors.
'The commodity prices are really high,' said 64-year-old Mrauk U resident Hla Paw Tun.
'Many people are selling, but few are buying,' he said.
'We have been struggling to survive day by day.'
Rakhine has long been wracked by civil conflict – the site of alleged military atrocities against the resident Rohingya minority around 2017, which some countries have deemed a genocide.
More than one million Rohingya now live in Bangladeshi border camps – and the UN said last month that a massive new influx had seen 150,000 arrivals over the previous 18 months.
Meanwhile, nearly half a million people remain displaced inside Rakhine.
Among them is 49-year-old Hla Aye, who fled her village for Mrauk U when two bombs fell near her house.
She set up as a shopkeeper, but that business quickly failed in Rakhine's hostile wartime economy.
Still, she believes that her struggles may not be over yet.
'I have no idea how the future will be and if it will be more difficult,' she said. — AFP

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