UNITED NATIONS (AFP) — Myanmar is facing a “severe crisis” with the number of people needing aid tripling to three million in the eight months since the military launched a coup, the UN humanitarian coordinator to the country said Thursday.
Andrew Kirkwood described the situation as “very concerning.”
“The people of Myanmar are really living in a severe crisis at the moment,” he said in a virtual meeting with reporters.
“The United Nations was supporting a million people affected by the conflict here inside the country,” he said.
But that number “now is three million, that’s a tripling in over the last eight months” since the February 1 coup.
“It’s is a very concerning situation, definitely the worst situation I think in the country that I’ve seen,” said Kirkwood, who has been in Myanmar for a decade.
“There is no way we can reach those three million people with the resources that we have at the moment,” he continued, calling for more funding.
In a recent report UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called for an “urgent” international response to the political crisis created by the coup in Myanmar.
The military has carried out a bloody crackdown on opponents, with more than 1,100 civilians killed and 8,400 imprisoned, according to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (AAPP).
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