10 June 2026 By Ko Myo
NEW YORK, United Nations — Five million children in Myanmar are now in desperate need of urgent humanitarian assistance to survive, the country’s permanent representative to the United Nations has warned, accusing the military regime of launching relentless airstrikes despite attempts to rebrand its political image.
Speaking at a UN conference on Monday, 8 June, Ambassador Kyaw Moe Tun stated that approximately one-third of Myanmar’s total population is trapped in a severe humanitarian crisis.
He emphasized that the military high command shows “absolutely no intention of changing its behavioral pattern,” continuing to target civilian-populated zones with heavy aerial bombardments that constitute ongoing war crimes and crimes against humanity.
The envoy’s remarks follow a series of nominal administrative reshuffles within the junta’s cabinet. However, domestic pro-democracy monitors insist that these structural adjustments have only led to an intensification of state violence.
“Ever since Min Aung Hlaing adopted traditional civilian attire (the Gaungbaung headdress) for formal state functions, the volume of military airstrikes has actually risen,” a Monywa-based political activist told MPA.
“They are trying to trick the world by constructing a superficial facade of civilian governance, but their appetite for slaughtering their own citizens remains completely unchanged.”
Ambassador Kyaw Moe Tun further highlighted that women and young girls are bearing the absolute brunt of this “man-made catastrophe,” which has hollowed out the country’s social safety nets, healthcare systems, and educational infrastructure.
Despite facing systemic vulnerabilities and severe persecution, the ambassador noted that Myanmar’s women continue to serve as the structural backbone of the anti-coup resistance movement, leading both civil disobedience networks and political reform fronts during this historic transition.
“Myanmar’s women are driving the transformation from the frontlines,” Kyaw Moe Tun asserted, directly appealing to UN bodies and international developmental agencies to shift from rhetorical support to tangible, long-term operational solidarity with grassroots women’s networks.
As the civil war enters a heavily volatile phase marked by widespread territorial changes, international humanitarian agencies warn that the delivery of emergency assistance remains severely choked by junta-enforced aid blockades.
Without immediate, cross-border intervention mechanisms to circumvent regime restrictions, observers warn that the survival rate of millions of displaced children in Myanmar’s central and frontier conflict areas will continue to sharply decline.





