By Chun Nrein / MPA [ Photo Story ]
In a battered, soot-stained pot, broken rice grains are boiled into a soft, sticky mash. From an ancient plate where the ceramic glaze peels away in flakes, 80-year-old Pwa Naw Phaw Na struggles to eat her meager meal.
A watery bowl of traditional Karen Talapaw soup and a single boiled danyin fruit (jengkol bean) constitute her entire daily nutrition. Fleeing Myanmar’s relentless civil war in 1997, this Karen elder has spent nearly three decades in the Nu Po refugee camp on the Thai-Myanmar border.
Midnight at Sunset
Age and malnutrition have carved deep lines into Pwa Naw Phaw Na’s face, making her appear far older than her years. Her dark, sagging eyelids, toothless gums, and thin, silver hair are stark testaments to a life entering its final, difficult chapter.
“If the donors disappear, I suppose I’ll have to find work,” she says with a hollow laugh.
Though her cheeks are sunken, her voice remains firm, and her eyes still flicker with a stubborn light. She endures this “ugly twilight” not for herself, but to care for her 65-year-old sister and a stray ginger cat they have taken in.
A Burnt Past, A Broken Hope
Both sisters have lived their lives unmarried, with no children to provide care in their old age. They live in a dilapidated hut of bamboo and thatched leaves that leans precariously against the wind. The front steps have long since rotted away, forcing them to enter through the back. When it rains, they huddle together in the few dry spots left under the shredded roof.
“I don’t want to go back. I can’t even remember where I lived,” she says, her memory clouded by trauma. “When we fled, the war was everywhere. I looked back once, and my house was already in flames.”
The only memento she carried from her homeland—a traditional red Karen bag—is now fraying into individual threads. Like the bag, the sisters’ hopes are unraveling.
The Looming Famine
The residents of Nu Po are bound by shared suffering, but now they face a collective destiny: “starvation and hopelessness.” International food aid is scheduled to cease entirely by the end of December 2025. For those in the camp, the year 2026 is shrouded in dread.
“We aren’t sure if there will be any food left in 2026,” residents say.
Beyond food, the decline in healthcare is life-threatening. The six-hour journey to the hospital in Mae Sot is an impossible odyssey for the elderly and infirm.
“Chickens in a Cage”
The darkness extends to the youth. While some are technically permitted to work outside the camp, the reality is a lack of employers and the agonizing choice of leaving family behind.
The refugees describe their existence as “chickens in a cage, waiting for someone to drop feed.” Though their ancestral homes are barely thirty minutes away on a map, the path is blocked by active frontlines, shifting political landscapes, and the world’s indifference.
The Forgotten Life
As the sun sets over the mountains, the grandmother gazes through the cracks in her hut. Beyond those peaks lies the land she fled—now a wasteland of scorched memories. Her clouded eyes hold less of a longing for home and more of a mounting terror: how will we find food tomorrow?
While the global community discusses progress and technology, time has stood still for thirty years in this bamboo hut. As international attention fades, Pwa Naw Phaw Na and thousands like her have become “the forgotten ones,” slipping through the cracks of history.
Survival here is not about dignity; it is a grueling, daily struggle to keep a fading pulse. In the cold nights of the Nu Po hills, the battle for life continues, even as the safety net that once held them together begins to snap, thread by thread.





