Residents protest Chinese oil tankers in Kyaukphyu

Residents protest Chinese oil tankers in Kyaukphyu
by -
Mizzima
A Rakhine ethnic man collects oil on the shore of Kyauk Phyu, Rakhine state, western Myanmar. Photo: EPA
A Rakhine ethnic man collects oil on the shore of Kyauk Phyu, Rakhine state, western Myanmar. Photo: EPA

About 600 residents of the deep-water port town of Kyaukphyu in western Myanmar’s Rakhine state on Monday protested against Chinese oil tankers moving into the area, as the operation of a long-delayed and controversial U.S. $1.5-billion pipeline gets under way, RFA reported on 22 May.

The residents boarded more than 100 motorboats and piloted them from Kyaukphyu to Maday Island, site of the local office of the Chinese state-owned oil company China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC), or Petro China, which operates the tankers.

The protesters said that local fishermen’s livelihoods are threatened because Myanmar’s Fisheries Department has banned them from fishing in the area, while allowing oil tankers to operate there, and that the government has failed to rectify the situation, the report said.

More news from Mizzima
May 30, 2026
A new Human Rights Myanmar report warns that major digital platforms failed to protect Myanmar’s...
May 29, 2026
In a major escalation of its air campaign over southern Chin State, the military junta launched...
May 28, 2026
Severe public backlash has erupted in Yangon’s Insein Township following reports that the Insein...
May 27, 2026
Meta removed 109 Facebook pages, profiles, and groups linked to Myanmar’s military junta, Mytel...