UNICEF warns of rise in people displaced in Myanmar

18 October 2023
UNICEF warns of rise in people displaced in Myanmar
Children living at the Market 3 IDP camp in the centre of Laiza town, Kachin state, Myanmar. /Photo: UN OCHA

The United Nations Children’s Fund or UNICEF has called for humanitarian aid for the growing number of people displaced in Myanmar due to the conflict and crisis.

In a statement, issued on n16 October, UNICEF says the situation is of grave concern, and that due attention needs to be paid to the children caught up in the crisis that has developed since the 2021 military coup.

As of September 2023, the total number of internally displaced persons has risen to more than 1.9 million out of a total population of 56 million, the organization says.

More than 1.6 million people have been displaced since February 2021, with more than 50 per cent of them, an estimated 820,800 people, from Sagaing region. Magway region has also been badly affected, with 218,900 people displaced and impacted by regular heavy fighting, air strikes and artillery shelling.

An estimated 15,000 people have been displaced and are facing food shortages due to air strikes in Kamma sub township in Magway; humanitarian access is not possible due to security concerns and military operations. In many parts of the country, particularly the northwest, the movement of essential goods and humanitarian access is also still being hampered.

The southeast has the second largest number of displaced populations after the northwest with 545,000 internally displaced persons2. Intensified armed conflicts continue in Myawaddy, Kyarinseikkyi, Kawkareik and Hpa-pun, with 8,300 people taking refuge at the Thailand-Myanmar border.

In Kachin State, the intensification of armed conflicts and heavy military deployments is mainly in the south and southwest. Mines and unexploded ordnance also continue to pose a significant threat to children, the community, and humanitarian workers.

In northern Shan, armed conflicts between the Myanmar Armed Forces and various armed groups in Nawnghkio, Kutkai, Muse and Namhkan townships are continuing to grow, causing people from Muse township to be displaced twice in September.

Fighting in Kayah State increased, also resulting in increased displacement, with the number of internally displaced persons reaching 100,500 as of 18 September. Approximately 800 people, including those who had returned from the Thailand border in mid-September and who are living in the camps in Maesae township, Kayah State are in urgent need of humanitarian assistance, which humanitarian access is not possible at the moment.