18 May 2026 By Hlaing
PAKOKKU, Myanmar — The Myanmar military has launched a sweeping economic blockade across Magway Region, completely cutting off the transport of food, medicine, and basic consumer goods from the major trading hub of Pakokku to over ten nearby townships west of the Irrawaddy River.
The severe restrictions, which came into effect on 13 May, target highly volatile territories including the Yaw region, Myaing, Pauk, Myitche, Yesagyo, Seikphyu, Chauk, Yenangyaung, and Salin, as well as Ngathayauk and Nyaung-U townships in neighboring Mandalay Region. The tactic represents a return to the military’s notorious “four cuts” doctrine, designed to starve resistance forces of logistical and civilian support.
“Goods are allowed to enter Pakokku town, but absolutely nothing is permitted to leave,” a local merchant in Pakokku told MPA. “Whatever supplies we try to send out are seized or turned back at checkpoints. Express bus and truck terminals have suspended freight services. For a week now, cargo vehicles have been traveling completely empty. We cannot transport rice, cooking oil, or medicine.”
The blockade bans not only staple foodstuffs and lifesaving pharmaceuticals but also personal hygiene products, fresh produce, and dry goods.
The economic strangulation coincides with intensified military operations. The junta has deployed jet fighters, paramotors, and gyrocopters to launch heavy airstrikes on the oil-producing sectors of Myaing and Pauk townships, frequently targeting crude oil artisan fields and inflicting civilian casualties.
The humanitarian situation has rapidly deteriorated since 18 May, when a massive infantry column, accompanied by a heavy logistics convoy from the No. 22 Defense Equipment Factory (Ka-Pa-Sa 22) in Seikphyu, pushed into southern Pauk Township.
According to the Pauk Township People’s Administration, the multi-pronged ground advance along the Pathein-Monywa highway has forced nearly 6,500 civilians from an estimated 1,200 households across seven villages to abandon their homes and flee into the forest.
In the western strongholds of Saw and Kyaukhtu, merchants have completely suspended ordering new shipments due to the high security risks. “We can’t get anything out of Pakokku anyway,” a local shopkeeper said. “We have stopped placing orders and are just rationing and selling whatever stock we have left.”
Pro-junta media figures, including military lobbyist Kyaw Soe Oo, acknowledged on social media that the military is currently locked in fierce, unresolved battles with resistance forces along the Nyaung-U corridor in Mandalay Region.
Military analysts suggest that Pakokku’s geographical position as the primary gateway to the western hills makes it a strategic choke point. By locking down the town’s trade channels, the regime hopes to systematically starve out resistance networks in Chin State and the Yaw area. However, as independent monitors point out, it is the rural civilian populace that is once again bearing the brunt of the military’s scorched-earth administration.





