The Prague Post - Making connections in Myanmar's fractured state

EUR -
AED 4.309937
AFN 79.974464
ALL 96.94329
AMD 448.468957
ANG 2.101161
AOA 1076.162683
ARS 1681.072535
AUD 1.778674
AWG 2.112424
AZN 1.989985
BAM 1.955665
BBD 2.363136
BDT 142.790116
BGN 1.955665
BHD 0.442269
BIF 3501.55762
BMD 1.173569
BND 1.505196
BOB 8.107439
BRL 6.274369
BSD 1.173319
BTN 103.496836
BWP 15.629918
BYN 3.974125
BYR 23001.947791
BZD 2.359737
CAD 1.626625
CDF 3327.067262
CHF 0.935029
CLF 0.028454
CLP 1116.252732
CNY 8.361326
CNH 8.360997
COP 4566.883877
CRC 591.059087
CUC 1.173569
CUP 31.099572
CVE 110.257368
CZK 24.324325
DJF 208.935537
DKK 7.46466
DOP 74.384851
DZD 151.793493
EGP 56.3471
ERN 17.603531
ETB 168.467439
FJD 2.62727
FKP 0.865717
GBP 0.865687
GEL 3.157245
GGP 0.865717
GHS 14.314009
GIP 0.865717
GMD 83.908281
GNF 10176.29559
GTQ 8.995377
GYD 245.473008
HKD 9.154189
HNL 30.739872
HRK 7.534776
HTG 153.529373
HUF 390.892031
IDR 19255.798937
ILS 3.914984
IMP 0.865717
INR 103.599717
IQD 1537.093601
IRR 49377.905898
ISK 143.234146
JEP 0.865717
JMD 188.216972
JOD 0.832053
JPY 173.518018
KES 151.589507
KGS 102.628829
KHR 4702.674478
KMF 492.314003
KPW 1056.252107
KRW 1634.816571
KWD 0.358373
KYD 0.977832
KZT 634.446083
LAK 25441.238941
LBP 105070.726938
LKR 354.015495
LRD 208.265584
LSL 20.36339
LTL 3.465243
LVL 0.70988
LYD 6.335561
MAD 10.566169
MDL 19.488651
MGA 5199.640078
MKD 61.53574
MMK 2464.299154
MNT 4220.177636
MOP 9.405549
MRU 46.838758
MUR 53.374273
MVR 17.967305
MWK 2034.459173
MXN 21.628694
MYR 4.934849
MZN 75.002649
NAD 20.36339
NGN 1763.051164
NIO 43.177011
NOK 11.571502
NPR 165.594537
NZD 1.974542
OMR 0.449869
PAB 1.173319
PEN 4.089017
PGK 4.972656
PHP 67.092541
PKR 333.122841
PLN 4.252206
PYG 8384.419625
QAR 4.283204
RON 5.066336
RSD 117.131892
RUB 97.763233
RWF 1700.182312
SAR 4.402764
SBD 9.631337
SCR 16.690845
SDG 705.894664
SEK 10.933907
SGD 1.509089
SHP 0.922241
SLE 27.432182
SLL 24609.154515
SOS 670.553584
SRD 46.209317
STD 24290.504006
STN 24.498304
SVC 10.266289
SYP 15258.684042
SZL 20.343592
THB 37.214153
TJS 11.040936
TMT 4.119226
TND 3.415564
TOP 2.748616
TRY 48.499492
TTD 7.977448
TWD 35.559012
TZS 2886.400202
UAH 48.371352
UGX 4123.714554
USD 1.173569
UYU 46.996747
UZS 14604.989033
VES 186.280981
VND 30964.61186
VUV 139.571972
WST 3.224613
XAF 655.911597
XAG 0.027823
XAU 0.000322
XCD 3.171628
XCG 2.114654
XDR 0.815744
XOF 655.911597
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.128051
ZAR 20.415751
ZMK 10563.526792
ZMW 27.837073
ZWL 377.888663
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    77.27

    0%

  • NGG

    0.5300

    71.6

    +0.74%

  • BCC

    -3.3300

    85.68

    -3.89%

  • AZN

    -1.5400

    79.56

    -1.94%

  • BTI

    -0.7200

    56.59

    -1.27%

  • JRI

    0.1100

    14.23

    +0.77%

  • GSK

    -0.6500

    40.83

    -1.59%

  • CMSC

    -0.0200

    24.36

    -0.08%

  • RELX

    0.1700

    46.5

    +0.37%

  • SCS

    -0.1900

    16.81

    -1.13%

  • RIO

    -0.1000

    62.44

    -0.16%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    24.4

    +0.04%

  • RYCEF

    0.1800

    15.37

    +1.17%

  • VOD

    -0.0100

    11.85

    -0.08%

  • BCE

    -0.1400

    24.16

    -0.58%

  • BP

    -0.5800

    33.89

    -1.71%

Making connections in Myanmar's fractured state
Making connections in Myanmar's fractured state / Photo: STR - AFP

Making connections in Myanmar's fractured state

In a riverine battleground in western Myanmar, an entrepreneur hunts for reception using a makeshift bamboo antenna, his payphone kiosk providing locals a lifeline to connect with their loved ones.

Text size:

In commercial capital Yangon, a student flicks through apps that cloak his online identity so he can skirt social media bans that accompanied the 2021 coup.

And in the mountainous east, customers at an internet cafe feverishly scroll for news from the outside, dependent on Elon Musk-owned satellites.

Four years of civil war between Myanmar's military and its myriad opponents have shattered communications networks.

In response, people have resorted to methods ranging from the old-fashioned to the ingenious to the hyper-modern.

"I don't want to be cut off from the world," Hnin Sandar Soe, 20, said at an internet cafe in eastern Karenni state where she reads headlines, studies online and reaches out to friends and family.

"It always brings a warm and comforting feeling to keep in touch with them."

- Payphone lifeline -

Myanmar has been under military rule for most of its post-independence history, but a decade-long democratic thaw starting in 2010 was accompanied by an astronomical growth in connectivity.

That year, SIM cards cost $1,000 and fewer than five percent of the population owned a mobile phone, according to World Bank figures.

Seven years later, that figure was 82 percent, as citizens seized on the rapidly developing cellular networks and novelty of free speech.

But since the military toppled the civilian government and ignited the war, there has been a slide back into digital darkness.

The junta has banned a slew of apps, conflict has eviscerated infrastructure and blackouts are weaponised by all sides.

In western Rakhine state, where civil war has intensified long-running conflict, reliable communications are now a dim memory.

Witnessing his neighbours hiking hills for mobile signal, Saw Thein Maung founded an old-fashioned payphone business six months ago.

Today, he operates three phones wired to antennas on 10-metre (33-foot) poles that wobble in the wind above the delta town of Ponnagyun.

The business earns him a relative fortune of up to $23 a day as customers clamour to dial out.

"They don't want to stop speaking with their children elsewhere. They don't care how much they have to pay," Saw Thein Maung said.

Customer Tun Lin, 27, uses the payphone to ring city-dwelling contacts to enquire about job openings.

"Making phone calls is the only way," the unemployed former NGO worker said.

- Satellite solutions -

Activist group the Myanmar Internet Project (MIP) says there have been nearly 400 regional internet shutdowns since the junta takeover.

What it calls a "digital coup" has slowed emergency responses, hampered education and hobbled the economy.

"The public is experiencing hardship as a result of this insult added to injury," said MIP spokesman Han, who goes by one name. "They are looking for all kinds of ways to resist."

In Karenni state, an internet cafe with a glowing blue router offers an oasis of connectivity, bypassing restrictions by tethering to Musk's Starlink satellite system.

The junta has not licensed the technology, meaning it is illegal to operate.

Cafe owner Marino had it smuggled over the border to his shop, where the cutting-edge web link contrasts with the corrugated roof and tarpaulin walls.

"We need the internet to know what is happening in our country or the world and if our friends are doing well or not," he said.

Nearby, an elderly woman chatted on her phone and a gaggle of teens played online games.

- Dodging disconnection -

Major cities under junta control retain reliable internet, but Facebook, Instagram, X and WhatsApp -- where opposition groups have typically organised -- are all banned.

In Yangon, virtual private networks (VPNs) provide a way to dodge the bans.

After the junta started blocking VPNs last year, a whisper network rippled through the city, with people sharing free options that still function.

One week the best is 1.1.1.1, before JumpJumpVPN emerges as more popular, and then everyone moves to Now VPN.

But the junta security forces now conduct spot checks for VPNs, said one 23-year-old student, speaking on condition of anonymity because he uses the outlawed apps.

"Other countries have internet freedom and young people can learn freely," he said. "It is different in our country where everything is restricted. I feel our rights are blocked."

He remains undeterred. "We young people have a mindset that we will overcome any restrictions."

S.Danek--TPP