Steve McCurry - Sittwe, Burma/Myanmar, 1995.
seen from China
seen from Belgium
seen from Thailand
seen from Malaysia
seen from France
seen from Malaysia
seen from Germany
seen from Malaysia
seen from Malaysia
seen from Japan
seen from Canada

seen from United States

seen from Switzerland

seen from United States

seen from France

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Israel
seen from United States

seen from Maldives
Steve McCurry - Sittwe, Burma/Myanmar, 1995.
A row of #palm trees basking in the #sunset in #Sittwe, #Myanmar. A daily photo from my archives. bewarethecheese.com #photography #travel #asia #southeastasia
Cyclone Mocha: Hasun’s Story
Photo: A Rohingya woman with a young child walks through a destroyed community near Sittwe, Myanmar.
Hasun is Rohingya and father to 3 children: A 10 year-old, 7 year-old, and 3 year-old.
He shared that his community near Sittwe, Myanmar received information about the cyclone and flooding. The village administrator suggested evacuating to a safer place but didn't say where to go. Some people moved to other villages where they have relatives. Hasun said they didn’t have any relatives to go to. He and his wife didn’t know where to go with their three children, so they decided to stay home. On Sunday the 14th, around 12 pm, the wind started, and it became stronger and stronger. He was aware that the storm was very powerful and realized that he couldn't stay home anymore. There had been some cyclones before, but this time it was so strong.
Suddenly, more water came in quickly with high speeds and washed out his wife and mother-in-law.
He is not sure what time his family decided to leave the house. It was flooding outside; they were trying to get out of the village. Suddenly, more water came in quickly with high speeds and washed out his wife and mother-in-law. The water reached up to his neck. He managed to escape with his three children, but he couldn't save his wife and her mother. His wife's dead body was found hooked on the barbed wire fence. She was thirty years old.
He said some people wouldn’t have died if there was no barbed wire fence. Because of the fence, they had to choose a different route to escape, which took more time, and resulted in many lost lives. Some people tried to break the brick wall on the other side of the airport, later some police helped them break it, and they were able to escape from the flood.
His children are living with a family in another village, and the youngest child is always crying for their mother. Now, he is living in his village beside the road. Almost every house was destroyed in Sittwe, so it is hard for people to host another family. Now, the most important thing that they need is rice, food, and shelter.
The stories from our Rohingya friends whose entire communities were destroyed by Cyclone Mocha are heartbreaking to hear. The crisis caused by this natural disaster was gravely compounded by the dire conditions that Rohingya families endure under the Myanmar government.
We are called to bear witness to our friends' experiences as we stand in solidarity with them.
Please join us as our team rapidly responds to the urgent relief requests from Rohingya communities in the aftermath of Cyclone Mocha.
Donate Now
Submit your best shots to our 15th Annual Photo Contest, open now!
Photo: Fish Pickers
Photographer caption: Local women choosing and picking various sizes of fishes at Ngapali Beach in Myanmar. This activity can be seen when the fishing boats have returned from the sea in the morning.
Photo by Zay Yar Lin (Yangon, Myanmar); Sittwe, Myanmar
Sittwe - Myanmar
novemver ‘16
A spectacular #sunset in #Sittwe, #Myanmar. A daily photo from my archives. bewarethecheese.com #photography #travel #asia #southeastasia
A post I should have written ages ago
My first encounter with a Rohingya family was in March of last year during my time as an intern with Partners Relief & Development. We flew to the West-coast of Myanmar to a city called Sittwe. There I got my first glance of what you would call a concentration camp. We visited a family living there. They had lost everything they owned, and lived in a very simple house. Although it was simple, it was still nicer than many of the shacks and broken-down tents most of the IDPs were living in. I got sick while we were there and the family took me into their home and let me lay on their floor. They checked up on me regularly, giving me water to drink. They constantly apologized for the “lack” of cleanliness in Rohingya food. I remember feeling safe and loved despite our obvious differences.
Last week I was sitting at a coffee shop in Oslo, happy that the sun was shining enough for me to be able to wear sunglasses and a t-shirt. I was there with my mom, my sister and a girl named Shabana. We were enjoying our bagels with cream cheese and fresh-pressed OJ. Shabana is a Rohingya girl who escaped from Myanmar and came to Norway when she was seven. Other than the color of our skin, we had few differences. We discussed the difficulty of moving to a country halfway across the world at an age where one still remembers where “home” used to be (I also moved to a different country at a vulnerable age). We discussed school, and what it is like to have a job alongside school and how it is hard to balance everything. We wore similar clothes, ate the same food and spoke the same language.
She told me about her family, and how her father made sure to keep their traditions and mother tongue alive at home. Shabana’s father, mother and sisters are safe in Norway, but the rest of her family members are still in Myanmar in the chaos and violence hundreds of thousands of Rohingya are trying to escape.
As Shabana told me about her past, I felt a lump forming in my throat. As shallow as it sounds, this was the first time I felt a deep urge to help. I wanted to tell her that there was something I could do, someone I could contact, but all I could do was sip my refreshing orange juice and wipe my pathetic tears.
Aung San Suu Kyi used to be the Rohingya’s only hope for freedom. Like so many others, they thought she would be an advocate for human rights. She has not done what we hoped she would do. For the Rohingya she has contributed to making their lives a lot worse. What can one say, when not even the one person who could have helped them does so?
“My father was there in August of ‘88.” Shabana told me.
“He believed in her, alongside so many other Rohingya people.”
Meeting Shabana and hearing her story made me feel hopeless. At the time, I felt like I couldn’t do much except support her and listen to her story. However, as I have been reading the headlines and articles on the news, I’ve felt a need to write about my short, but meaningful encounter with the Rohingya people.
The Rohingya never disrespected me, threatened me or mistreated me. It would never even cross my mind that these beautiful and hospitable people would be a threat to anybody, whether it is Norway or Myanmar.
I have never felt that their religion or culture would be a threat to Norway’s the way the authorities of Myanmar believe they will impact theirs. Shabana and her people are human beings just like me. Shabana is just like me. She likes to listen to music, to put on makeup and wear nice clothes. She probably dreams of visiting her home in Myanmar again, the same way I miss being back in my home in Chiang Mai. The difference is she can never go back.
I haven’t written or spoken out about the situation in Myanmar other than to my friends and family. Because I feel like such a small and insignificant person in a world filled with war and conflict. I assume that for most of you reading this, loving your neighbor means loving all human beings, whether they are black, white, Jewish, Christian, Muslim or Buddhist. We’ve been taught since we were children that no one has more worth than the other based on religion or appearance.
I can’t go on reading the news about the terrible things happening to my brothers and sisters in Myanmar without saying anything or doing anything. Therefore, I will say this: I am 21 years old, 162 cm tall. I don’t have a bachelor’s degree yet, and I don’t know how to change the tires of a car. Sometimes I fail miserably at making a fire to keep the house warm and I lose my temper too often. But I do have a voice. It’s a small one, but it’s there. Right now this voice is for the Rohingya, because I believe that injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.
Elise is from Norway but was born and raised in Chiang Mai, Thailand. Living in Norway has taught her how to love the outdoors and she enjoys hiking, camping trips, skiing and running. Elise volunteered with Partners last year teaching English.
Sittwe - Myanmar
november ‘17