Skip to main content

MSF responds to landslide and flooding in Myanmar

War in Gaza:: find out how we're responding
Learn more

On July 4, 2009, torrential rains caused a major landslide and subsequent flooding in Hpakant, a mining area in northern Kachin state, Myanmar, where MSF runs an STI/HIV clinic. Officials have recorded 24 people dead, although figures are unclear. Around 1,000 people who have lost their homes have sought refuge in local monasteries and a school. The local 25 bed government hospital has received dozens of injured and part of the hospital has also been flooded.

In response, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has been distributing non-food items, including soap, blankets and mosquito nets, along with essential food items, donated by the World Food Programme, to those affected by the disaster. The organization is also providing support to the government hospital through the provision of medical supplies. MSF continues to monitor the situation closely, especially water and sanitation which is a key area of concern, and are ready to respond as necessary.

MSF activities in Kachin State

At its northernmost reaches, Kachin State borders China and comprises thick jungle, along with Myanmar’s largest mountains. The region contains people from many different ethnic groups, as well as numerous migrant workers - attracted by the big Jade mines. In these places, health issues, notably HIV/AIDS, are fuelled by a prevalence of brothels and opium dens, and compounded by a lack of accessible and affordable health services. Here, MSF runs eight clinics and numerous mobile clinics, providing services in HIV/AIDS care, treatment and prevention activities (including harm-reduction for intra-venous drug users), reproductive tract infection treatment, tuberculosis treatment, malaria treatment and health education.

HIV in Myanmar

The situation for many people living with HIV in Myanmar is critical due to a severe lack of lifesaving antiretroviral treatment (ART). MSF currently provides ART to more than 11,000 people. That is the majority of all available treatment countrywide but only a small fraction of what is urgently needed. An estimated 240,000 people are currently infected with HIV in Myanmar. 76,000 of these people are in urgent need of ART, yet less than 20 percent of them receive it through the combined efforts of MSF, other international non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and the Government of Myanmar.

For the remaining people, the private market offers little assistance as the most commonly used first-line treatment costs the equivalent of a month’s average wage. The lack of accessible treatment resulted in 25,000 AIDS related deaths in 2007 and a similar number of people are expected to suffer the same fate this year, unless HIV/AIDS services - most importantly the provision of ART - are urgently scaled-up.

The Government of Myanmar and the International Community need to mobilize quickly in order to address this situation. Currently, the Government spends a mere 0.3 percent of the gross domestic product on health, the lowest amount worldwide, a small portion of which goes to HIV/AIDS. Likewise, overseas development aid for Myanmar is the second lowest per capita worldwide and few of the big international donors provide any resources to the country. Yet, 189 member states of the United Nations, including Myanmar, endorsed the Millennium Development Goals, including the aim to “Achieve universal access to treatment for HIV/AIDS for all those who need it, by 2010”. As it stands, this remains a far cry from becoming a reality in Myanmar.