[Excerpt] Background In Myanmar, humanitarian needs continue to increase due to escalating conflicts which continue to cause mass displacement and exacerbate existing vulnerabilities of affected...
Myanmar
Three years on from the military takeover, the humanitarian landscape for 2024 is grim with a third of the population – 18.6 million people – now estimated to be in humanitarian need. Children are bearing the brunt of the crisis with 6 million children in need as a result of displacement, interrupted health-care and education, food insecurity and malnutrition, and protection risks including forced recruitment and mental distress.
The economic situation is placing families in increasing financial distress and coping capacities are stretched to the limit. Interruptions to agriculture and rapid inflation are making it increasingly difficult for people to access and afford adequate food, raising the spectre of climbing malnutrition. The health system is in crisis and millions are without safe shelter or drinking water.
Women, girls, persons with disabilities and stateless Rohingya people are among those impacted the most by this dangerous environment. Development gains are concurrently under extreme threat with poverty now back at levels not seen for 15 years.
The UN and partners require almost US$1 billion to reach 5.3 million people who have been prioritized for urgent assistance.
We cannot afford a repeat of the gross underfunding seen in 2023 with only 29 per cent of requirements received. This lack of funding and severe access constraints meant that an estimated 1.9 million people who had been prioritized for support missed out on assistance altogether, while most of the 3.1 million people who were reached with some support did not receive the intended multi-sectoral assistance required to fully meet their needs.
Brave aid workers – the majority of them local organizations on the front line of the response – remain committed to staying and delivering and have scaled-up wherever they can over the past three years. However, de-politicization of aid, as well as significantly expanded access and greatly increased funding will be critical to preventing the suffering of everyone prioritized for support in this Plan.
Overview of the humanitarian response in Myanmar
For a full overview of the humanitarian response, visit humanitarianaction.info
- Population
- 56.6M
- People in need
- 18.6M
- People internally displaced
- 2.6M
- Total Population
- 56.6M 2024
- People in need
- 18.6M 2024
- People to be covered by assistance
- 5.3M 2024
- Total requirements (USD)
- 993.5M 2024
- Funding coverage (%)
- 36.21 2024
- Funding gap (USD)
- 633.8M 2024
#The Myanmar Humanitarian Fund
The Myanmar Humanitarian Fund (MHF), which was established in 2007, is a rapid and flexible funding mechanism supporting national and international NGOs and UN agencies to deliver lifesaving aid in the most insecure and least accessible parts of Myanmar. Under the leadership of the Humanitarian Coordinator, the MHF supports the timely allocation and disbursement of donor resources using its tried-and-tested area-based approach, which ensures that geographical and needs prioritization are driven by local communities and frontline responders in line with the Humanitarian Needs and Response Plan.
Funding for OCHA Myanmar
- Total requirements (USD)
- 6.6M 2024
- Opening balance (USD)
- 56.2K 2024
- Earmarked funding (USD)
- 4.2M 2024
- Total (USD)
- 4.2M 2024
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