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Myanmar’s Conflict Takes Its Toll on Popular Coastal Resort Town

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Myanmar’s Conflict Takes Its Toll on Popular Coastal Resort Town

On Ngapali Beach, the sands are deserted, the hotels stand empty, and many locals are struggling to make ends meet.

Myanmar’s Conflict Takes Its Toll on Popular Coastal Resort Town

Ngapali Beach, Myanmar’s premier beach resort, once attracted an international crowd of holidaymakers. Today, its beaches are all but deserted.

Credit: Jan Olson
Myanmar’s Conflict Takes Its Toll on Popular Coastal Resort Town

The upmarket Amara Ocean Resort has been forced to close for lack of customers.

Credit: Jan Olson
Myanmar’s Conflict Takes Its Toll on Popular Coastal Resort Town

Those hotels that remain open are at their lowest occupancy since the pandemic. “Usually this time of year it is full,” said one hotel worker.

Credit: Jan Olson
Myanmar’s Conflict Takes Its Toll on Popular Coastal Resort Town

A child plays in an otherwise empty pool at the upmarket Bayview Resort.

Credit: Jan Olson
Myanmar’s Conflict Takes Its Toll on Popular Coastal Resort Town

A lady selling coconuts. As the day draws to a close, she still has most of the coconuts left to sell.

Credit: Jan Olson
Myanmar’s Conflict Takes Its Toll on Popular Coastal Resort Town

With almost no tourist income and with staples such as rice and vegetables doubling or tripling in price, villagers are getting by on food donations from local monasteries.

Credit: Jan Olson
Myanmar’s Conflict Takes Its Toll on Popular Coastal Resort Town

In a bid to stop potential arms shipments from reaching the Arakan Army, the junta has stopped all boats from leaving the bay. “Before you’d see boats coming and going all the time,” said one local. Now none dare venture out.

Credit: Jan Olson
Myanmar’s Conflict Takes Its Toll on Popular Coastal Resort Town

Villagers at the Jade Taw fishing village cast nets into the shallows, hoping to catch enough that day to feed themselves.

Credit: Jan Olson
Myanmar’s Conflict Takes Its Toll on Popular Coastal Resort Town

Others pass the time with a game of sepak takraw as they wait for the embargo to end.

Credit: Jan Olson
Myanmar’s Conflict Takes Its Toll on Popular Coastal Resort Town

This part of southern Rakhine State is the region’s biggest exporter of fish, exporting 90 percent of its catch to Yangon and overseas. Some locals therefore regard the embargo as a form of economic punishment against the Rakhine people.

Credit: Jan Olson
Myanmar’s Conflict Takes Its Toll on Popular Coastal Resort Town

A lone fishing boat crosses the nearshore waters of the bay while the sun begins to set.

Credit: Jan Olson

Ngapali Beach, in the southern part of Myanmar’s Rakhine State, is facing tough times. Once known for attracting an international crowd of holidaymakers, the country’s premier beach resort is currently experiencing its lowest tourist numbers since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The situation here has deteriorated in recent weeks, three years after a military coup overthrew the elected government and inflamed the country’s multifaceted civil war.

In October of last year, the Arakan Army (AA), the armed faction of the Rakhine independence movement, initiated a joint offensive with two other ethnic armed groups, resulting in the capture of towns and border posts in the country’s northeast. In an effort to prevent arms shipments from reaching the AA, Myanmar’s overstretched military has cut road access to southern Rakhine and prohibited boats from leaving shore.

Predictably, this has had a devastating impact on Ngapali’s two main industries, tourism and fishing, during what should be the peak season for both. Hotels and restaurants have closed, and staff have been sent home without pay. Fishermen are out of work and are forced to get by on food handouts. Adding to the misery, fuel is increasingly hard to come by, food imports are running low, and prices have risen sharply – and no one can say how long the situation will last.

Once thought of as a bubble of peace and prosperity by local residents, the sense of security here has all but evaporated. One business owner summed up the anxiety, saying, “First they stop the fuel. Then they cut the road. What comes next?”