Medical staff treating Covid-19 patients say they were infected after using counterfeit N95 masks 

Masks without a filtering layer of polypropylene have been found in supplies at hospitals across the country 

Published on Dec 11, 2020
A doctor compares a high quality 3M brand N95 mask (center) with a suspected counterfeit (Sai Zaw/Myanmar Now)
A doctor compares a high quality 3M brand N95 mask (center) with a suspected counterfeit (Sai Zaw/Myanmar Now)

Medical staff in hospitals treating Covid-19 patients say they are being given fake and substandard masks that put them at a higher risk of being infected with the coronavirus that causes the disease. 

The government has supplied doctors and nurses across Myanmar with N95 masks, which are considered among the most effective pieces of protection against the virus. 

But the supplies have been tainted by counterfeits that cost less to produce and, medical staff and officials say, offer less protection than the real thing.

One doctor at the emergency department of a government-run hospital in Yangon said he was infected after wearing a fake mask while treating severely ill Covid-19 patients. 

 

 

The fakes appear to have tainted supplies sent directly from the government as well as batches given to hospitals by private donors, he said. 

“Two days before I got infected, I saw patients on ventilators,” he said. “At the time, I didn't know whether my mask was fake or real.” 

 

 

But after testing positive he checked his mask and found that the fonts, images and ear straps looked different to those on a genuine 3M branded N95 mask. 

“I realized it was a fake,” he said. 

Kyaw Ko Thet, a doctor who also sells and donates masks, said that the fake masks do not have a layer of polypropylene fabric, making them far less effective than genuine N95 masks that contain the filtering material. 

“Doctors and nurses are being infected one after another because of these fake masks,” he said. “It’s like giving us plastic guns and letting us go off to war.”  

It’s like giving us plastic guns and letting us go off to war.

He said that he found many substandard masks while buying medical supplies to donate to health workers.

A nurse working at the Wai Bar Gyi Infectious Diseases Hospital, which treats Covid-19 patients, told Myanmar Now that the facility has had a problem with fake masks for the past month. “But we have to wear what we have,” they said. 

FDA headquarters ignored warning 

Dr Htet Phyo Aung, an assistant lecturer at the University of Pharmacy in Yangon who campaigns against fake masks, said that in October he examined samples of 3M N95 masks from 10 hospitals and clinics treating Covid-19 patients and found counterfeits. 

He said he decided to check the masks because five of his friends were infected after treating patients with other conditions who later tested positive for the coronavirus.

“There are those who can distinguish between which mask is real and which mask is fake and those who cannot,” said Dr Htet Phyo Aung.

Substandard masks have also been found at treatment facilities in Ayeyarwady region, said Pyei Phyo, deputy director of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in Pathein township.

"When we examined the masks, the words were different from each other. The numbers were different. The fonts were not the same, the boldness was different in some places, the boxes were different,” he said.

Genuine 3M N95 masks have a sharp, straight blue line running around the inside, whereas the line on fakes is often blurry. Counterfeits may also fit poorly, giving the wearer less protection.

His office reported its findings to FDA headquarters in Naypyidaw in October but never received a reply, he said. 

Dr Than Min Htut, the medical superintendent of Pathein Hospital, said that a real 3M N95 mask costs about 15,000 kyat and supplies are limited.

"If we do not enter the ward because we do not have a real 3M mask, the patient will die. I have to use what I have now,” he said. “But we are careful. We know this is not a real 3M mask and the quality is not good. So I wear two masks on my face.”

Lin Bo Bo, the owner of the May pharmacy in Yangon’s Lanmadaw township, said substandard masks sell for about 3,000 kyat each at the wholesale market where he gets supplies. They look similar to real ones but have a different packaging seal.

"If the real 3M box is opened from above, the seal will break,” he said. “A lot of 3M masks with doubtful packages have been available in the market since the beginning of October,” he said. 

“When we explain there are counterfeits among the items sent by the pharmaceutical company, these masks are taken back after an apology,” he added.   

No import restrictions 

N95 masks are on a list of six medical products that are exempt from import restrictions because they are needed to tackle outbreaks of Covid-19.

Dr Tin Wah Wah Win, director of pharmaceuticals and cosmetics at the FDA, urged consumers to buy from “reputable” pharmaceutical companies.  

"We have no law to control mask quality. We can only act if there is a law,” she said. 

Myanmar has recorded over 100,000 Covid-19 cases and more than 2,100 deaths. More than 18,000 patients are still being treated in hospitals.

Around 150 health workers in Rakhine state and more than 500 in Yangon region have been infected while providing treatment to Covid-19 patients, said Dr Khin Khin Gyi, director of the Central Infectious Disease Control Division under the health ministry.

She attributed the problem of fake masks to private donors, and said government-supplied stocks were subject to quality controls. 

“Lately, donors have been buying protective equipment to donate directly to hospitals… these are not subject to the control of the ministry’s Quality Assurance Committee.”  

Chan Thar is Reporter with Myanmar Now

More than 80 percent of IDPs come back to the Chin State town, but few are expected to stay beyond the two-week ceasefire

Published on Jun 25, 2021
A road in Chin State (Myanmar Now)

Locals who had fled fighting in Mindat, Chin State returned home after a ceasefire was agreed to between the regime military and the local People’s Defence Force (PDF), according to a committee working with internally displaced persons (IDPs) in the township. 

After one week of negotiations involving local leaders and religious figures, the two forces agreed to a two-week ceasefire on Wednesday. The agreement is only valid until July 4.

More than 20,000 locals have been displaced from Mindat since mid-May by clashes. More than 80 percent have returned home in recent days, the Mindat Township IDP Management Committee has stated.

They had been taking shelter in 80 villages in the region, according to Lawrence, a representative of the committee. 

“There’s only a little more than 1,000 IDPs left in the villages,” Lawrence told Myanmar Now.

The majority of the IDPs returned to check on the condition of their homes, many of which were raided when the junta’s armed forces took over Mindat town. 

Lawrence noted that this is the season in which Mindat farmers typically cultivate konjac, and the displacement has interrupted their livelihoods and food security.

A member of the anti-coup Mindat Township People’s Administration Team said that while the majority of IDPs have returned following the temporary ceasefire, only a few are expected to stay. 

After three consecutive days of clashes in April, the military asked the local defence group to meet with them for negotiations, but the two sides were not able to come to an agreement. Clashes resumed on the night of May 12.

On May 13, the military council imposed martial law in Mindat, and began carrying out raids. They officially seized the town on May 15.

The military council’s armed forces attacked villages sheltering IDPs, including firing heavy artillery at an IDP camp despite the display of a white flag. They also blocked routes through which rations and medical supplies could be sent to the displaced persons. 

According to information provided by Mindat’s IDP management committee, by the third week of June, seven people, including a six-day-old baby, a seven-month-old baby, a 13-year-old child, a pregnant woman, and three other adults had died due to a lack of healthcare during their displacement. 

A local man who was involved in the negotiations between the regime’s armed forces and the PDF said that the temporary ceasefire was made with these conditions in mind.  

“The elderly are struggling a lot. So are the sick and disabled,” he told Myanmar Now.
“Unidentified thieves were destroying the town and people’s homes. People are losing their homes and livelihoods. The entire town became a ghost town. So religious figures from all backgrounds joined hands to pray and plan to bring the town back to life.”

For the period of the ceasefire, both the Mindat PDF and the military agreed to stop carrying out armed searches of people, shooting weapons, pressuring or threatening departmental staff or those involved in the Civil Disobedience Movement, and to allow vehicles carrying aid to IDPs to pass through the town. 

Military vehicles stationed on the town’s two main roads—Shwe Aung Thar and Htin Chaung—have since retreated, and some trucks have come to the town to provide supplies, locals said. 

Myanmar Now is an independent news service providing free, accurate and unbiased news to the people of Myanmar in Burmese and English.

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Seven hospitals in Meiktila and Naypyitaw refuse to admit a 14-year-old shot in the thigh before she is able to get treatment

Published on Jun 25, 2021
The 14-year old girl is seen being carried on a stretcher by medical volunteers on Wednesday night (Supplied) 

A 14-year-old girl from Meiktila with a gunshot wound to the thigh was turned away from multiple hospitals on Wednesday before finally being admitted to the 1,000-bed Naypyitaw General Hospital the following day. 

The girl was shot in Gway Taukkon village in Mandalay’s Meiktila Township at around 9pm on Wednesday. She was walking back home from her parents’ betel nut shop, according to a family member. The relative added that it was not clear who fired the shot, or from where. 

A local charity group, the Pyithayar Social Association, took the girl to seven hospitals that night in both Meiktila and more than two hours away in Naypyitaw, but none would admit her. 

They included the military hospital and public hospital in Meiktila, the general hospital, the 200-bed hospital and the Sangha Hospital in Naypyitaw’s Lewe Township, and the 1,000-bed general hospital and the military hospital in the city of Naypyitaw.

Both the Meiktila and Naypyitaw military hospitals told them that they could not admit the girl because she was a civilian and not a soldier; other hospitals refused on the grounds that there were no anaesthetists on duty or that they lacked surgical equipment.  

Thura Lwin Oo, an official from the charity group, said that the Naypyitaw General Hospital urged them to take the girl to another hospital as they were overcrowded with Covid-19 patients.

“If a patient is transferred from one hospital to another, the first hospital must give us a letter of referral, but they just did it verbally. They just told us to go to some other hospitals, so we were forced to waste time on the road all night until dawn,” he said. 

On Thursday morning, Thura Lwin Oo posted about the situation on social media in a plea for help.

“I was afraid she would have to have her leg amputated if we took any longer. Her thigh was no longer bleeding, but I was afraid something would happen because the bullet was still inside,” he said.

On Thursday morning, the charity group was able to make contact again with the general hospital in Naypyitaw. 

“We had to call them again. When we arrived in Naypyitaw last night, no one answered the phone,” Thura Lwin Oo explained on Thursday. “This morning, I called the hospital again and they told me to come back.” 

At the time of reporting, the girl’s condition was stable. 

Since the February 1 coup in Myanmar, health workers have been widely participating in the general strike as part of the Civil Disobedience Movement aimed at toppling military rule. 

Public hospitals and clinics have been operating with fewer staff as a result of the strike, with some health workers providing care privately or in community-run clinics. 

The junta has claimed that military doctors and nurses have been filling in at public hospitals in order to provide regular services. The military council announced on Wednesday that hospitals in Meiktila District were operating as usual. 

Myanmar Now is an independent news service providing free, accurate and unbiased news to the people of Myanmar in Burmese and English.

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It is unclear who will take delivery of the fuel, but it can be used for military aircraft

Published on Jun 25, 2021
The tanker is due to arrive in Yangon on Saturday 

A tanker ship carrying airplane fuel is scheduled to arrive in Yangon on Saturday after departing from Singapore’s Jurong Island on Tuesday, according to data from several marine tracking websites.

The Panama-registered tanker SANTYA is loaded with Jet A1 fuel, which can be used both for commercial aviation and military aircraft, documents seen by Myanmar Now showed. 

Activists from Justice for Myanmar last month condemned a similar shipment of fuel made by PetroChina International Singapore and said the company was “complicit in atrocities.”

It is unclear which company is supplying the new shipment and how much fuel will be delivered. The PetroChina shipment was 13,300 tonnes.  

Since seizing power on February 1, the coup regime has launched numerous indiscriminate airstrikes in Kachin, Kayah, Chin and Karen states, displacing tens of thousands of civilians in its bid to crush armed resistance to its rule.

The tanker is likely to discharge its cargo at Yangon’s Thilawa Port, which has terminals for bulk carriers and oil tankers. 

According to the marine tracking website FleetMon, the ship is operated by ENEOS Ocean Shipmanagement and previously called at Thilawa in April and May from Singapore.

A representative from ENEOS declined to comment on the shipment on Wednesday.

Justice for Myanmar spokesperson Yadanar Maung called on ENEOS to “immediately halt the shipment.”

“It is reckless of ENEOS to ship jet fuel to Myanmar while the illegal military junta is in power, conducting indiscriminate airstrikes, committing war crimes and crimes against humanity with total impunity,” Yadanar Maung told Myanmar Now. 

The spokesperson for the activist group pointed out that ENEOS is largely owned by Japanese financial institutions who have a duty to stop the company “from contributing to grave human rights violations in Myanmar.” 

Industry sources told Myanmar Now that the current shipment may have been arranged by Brighter Energy, a joint venture between Thailand’s PTT and Myanmar’s Kanbawza Group. 

They speculated that it also could have been set up by either Myat Myittar Mon Company, which is owned by the chair of Myanmar Petroleum Trade Association, or Puma Energy Asia Sun, a subsidiary of Puma Energy, which is majority-owned by the global commodities giant Trafigura. 

Myanmar Now was unable to confirm the sources’ suggestions.

Puma Energy, based in Singapore, started distributing aviation fuel under the name National Energy Puma Aviation Services as a joint venture with the state-owned Myanmar Petroleum Products Enterprise in 2015. 

On February 11 the company said it had suspended its operations in Myanmar following the coup for safety reasons, leaving its local partner to take over. 

The company also suspended petrol sales at Myitkyina airport in late May, saying its trucks were having difficulties reaching the area. 

The airport has been used by the military to launch airstrikes against the Kachin Independence Army, which recently attacked several trucks it suspected of carrying jet fuel.

Myanmar Now is an independent news service providing free, accurate and unbiased news to the people of Myanmar in Burmese and English.

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