Show Navigation
All Galleries
Add to Cart Download

Burmese in Mae Sot

18 images Created 26 May 2013

Tens of thousands of Burmese live in Mae Sot, Thailand and its environs. Some have Thai residency papers and work permits but most do not. They are undocumented immigrants who live openly but always in fear of being caught by Thai police or immigration authorities and being sent back to Burma (Myanmar).

Loading ()...

  • 23 MAY 2013 - MAE SOT, TAK, THAILAND: A boat full of Burmese come down the Moei River to an unofficial border crossing point in Mae Sot, Thailand. Most are people coming to Mae Sot for shopping or health care. Fifty years of political turmoil in Burma (Myanmar) has led millions of Burmese to leave their country. Many have settled in neighboring Thailand. Mae Sot, on the Mae Nam Moei (Moei River) is the center of the Burmese emigre community in central western Thailand. There are hundreds of thousands of Burmese refugees and migrants in the area. Many live a shadowy existence without papers and without recourse if they cross Thai authorities. The Burmese have their own schools and hospitals (with funding provided by NGOs). Burmese restaurants and tea houses are common in the area.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BurmeseMigrants059.jpg
  • 25 MAY 2013 - MAE SOT, TAK, THAILAND:     People wait to cross the Friendship Bridge over the Moei River between Mae Sot, Thailand and Myawaddy, Myanmar. Fifty years of political turmoil in Burma (Myanmar) has led millions of Burmese to leave their country. Many have settled in neighboring Thailand. Mae Sot, on the Mae Nam Moie (Moie River) is the center of the Burmese emigre community in central western Thailand. There are hundreds of thousands of Burmese refugees and migrants in the area. Many live a shadowy existence without papers and without recourse if they cross Thai authorities. The Burmese have their own schools and hospitals (with funding provided by NGOs). Burmese restaurants and tea houses are common in the area.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BurmeseRefugees004.jpg
  • 23 MAY 2013 - MAE SOT, TAK, THAILAND:  Burmese scramble up the Moei Riverbank after crossing into Thailand at an unofficial border crossing point. Myawaddy is in the background. Fifty years of political turmoil in Burma (Myanmar) has led millions of Burmese to leave their country. Many have settled in neighboring Thailand. Mae Sot, on the Mae Nam Moei (Moei River) is the center of the Burmese emigre community in central western Thailand. There are hundreds of thousands of Burmese refugees and migrants in the area. Many live a shadowy existence without papers and without recourse if they cross Thai authorities. The Burmese have their own schools and hospitals (with funding provided by NGOs). Burmese restaurants and tea houses are common in the area.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BurmeseMigrants052.jpg
  • 23 MAY 2013 - MAE SOT, TAK, THAILAND:  Burmese scramble up the Moei Riverbank after crossing into Thailand at an unofficial border crossing point. Myawaddy is in the background. Fifty years of political turmoil in Burma (Myanmar) has led millions of Burmese to leave their country. Many have settled in neighboring Thailand. Mae Sot, on the Mae Nam Moei (Moei River) is the center of the Burmese emigre community in central western Thailand. There are hundreds of thousands of Burmese refugees and migrants in the area. Many live a shadowy existence without papers and without recourse if they cross Thai authorities. The Burmese have their own schools and hospitals (with funding provided by NGOs). Burmese restaurants and tea houses are common in the area.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BurmeseMigrants060.jpg
  • 23 MAY 2013 - MAE SOT, TAK, THAILAND:A Burmese boy in Mae Sot, Thailand. Fifty years of political turmoil in Burma (Myanmar) has led millions of Burmese to leave their country. Many have settled in neighboring Thailand. Mae Sot, on the Mae Nam Moie (Moie River) is the center of the Burmese emigre community in central western Thailand. There are hundreds of thousands of Burmese refugees and migrants in the area. Many live a shadowy existence without papers and without recourse if they cross Thai authorities. The Burmese have their own schools and hospitals (with funding provided by NGOs). Burmese restaurants and tea houses are common in the area.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BurmeseMigrants061.jpg
  • 23 MAY 2013 - MAE SOT, TAK, THAILAND: A Burmese woman sells fried snacks at the foot of the Friendship Bridge between Mae Sot, Thailand and Myawaddy, Myanmar. Fifty years of political turmoil in Burma (Myanmar) has led millions of Burmese to leave their country. Many have settled in neighboring Thailand. Mae Sot, on the Mae Nam Moie (Moie River) is the center of the Burmese emigre community in central western Thailand. There are hundreds of thousands of Burmese refugees and migrants in the area. Many live a shadowy existence without papers and without recourse if they cross Thai authorities. The Burmese have their own schools and hospitals (with funding provided by NGOs). Burmese restaurants and tea houses are common in the area.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BurmeseMigrants042.jpg
  • 21 MAY 2013 - MAE KU, TAK, THAILAND:  Burmese Buddhist novice monks buy an ice cream treat in a Thai owned convenience store in Mae Ku, Thailand. There are more than two million Burmese migrants and refugees in Thailand and the overwhelming majority do not have access to Thai social services so they use services provided by NGOs. The Wangpha Clinic is run by the Shaklo Malaria Research Unit (SMRU), which operates clinics along the Thai-Burma (Myanmar) border in Tak province.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BurmeseMigrants006.jpg
  • 23 MAY 2013 - MAE SOT, TAK, THAILAND: A Burmese woman sells traditional Burmese conical hats in the Burmese market in Mae Sot, Thailand. Fifty years of political turmoil in Burma (Myanmar) has led millions of Burmese to leave their country. Many have settled in neighboring Thailand. Mae Sot, on the Mae Nam Moei (Moei River) is the center of the Burmese emigre community in central western Thailand. There are hundreds of thousands of Burmese refugees and migrants in the area. Many live a shadowy existence without papers and without recourse if they cross Thai authorities. The Burmese have their own schools and hospitals (with funding provided by NGOs). Burmese restaurants and tea houses are common in the area.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BurmeseMigrants083.jpg
  • 23 MAY 2013 - MAE SOT, TAK, THAILAND:    A Burmese teenager works sewing clothes and ribbons in the Burmese market in Mae Sot, Thailand. Fifty years of political turmoil in Burma (Myanmar) has led millions of Burmese to leave their country. Many have settled in neighboring Thailand. Mae Sot, on the Mae Nam Moei (Moei River) is the center of the Burmese emigre community in central western Thailand. There are hundreds of thousands of Burmese refugees and migrants in the area. Many live a shadowy existence without papers and without recourse if they cross Thai authorities. The Burmese have their own schools and hospitals (with funding provided by NGOs). Burmese restaurants and tea houses are common in the area.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BurmeseMigrants085.jpg
  • 23 MAY 2013 - MAE SOT, TAK, THAILAND:  A Burmese Muslim woman and other Burmese women in a shop that rents floor space to gem dealers in Mae Sot, Thailand. There is a thriving business in buying and selling gems and precious stones in Mae Sot. Many of the gems are smuggled into Thailand from Myanmar. Fifty years of political turmoil in Burma (Myanmar) has led millions of Burmese to leave their country. Many have settled in neighboring Thailand. Mae Sot, on the Mae Nam Moei (Moei River) is the center of the Burmese emigre community in central western Thailand. There are hundreds of thousands of Burmese refugees and migrants in the area. Many live a shadowy existence without papers and without recourse if they cross Thai authorities. The Burmese have their own schools and hospitals (with funding provided by NGOs). Burmese restaurants and tea houses are common in the area.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BurmeseMigrants092.jpg
  • 23 MAY 2013 - MAE SOT, TAK, THAILAND:  A Burmese gem stone vendor buys gems from a man in the Burmese market in Mae Sot, Thailand. There is a thriving business in buying and selling gems and precious stones in Mae Sot. Many of the gems are smuggled into Thailand from Myanmar. Fifty years of political turmoil in Burma (Myanmar) has led millions of Burmese to leave their country. Many have settled in neighboring Thailand. Mae Sot, on the Mae Nam Moei (Moei River) is the center of the Burmese emigre community in central western Thailand. There are hundreds of thousands of Burmese refugees and migrants in the area. Many live a shadowy existence without papers and without recourse if they cross Thai authorities. The Burmese have their own schools and hospitals (with funding provided by NGOs). Burmese restaurants and tea houses are common in the area.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BurmeseMigrants089.jpg
  • 23 MAY 2013 - MAE SOT, TAK, THAILAND:  A Chinese gemstone buyer checks the quality of a stone being sold by a Burmese man in the Burmese gem market in Mae Sot, Thailand. There is a thriving business in buying and selling gems and precious stones in Mae Sot. Many of the gems are smuggled into Thailand from Myanmar. Fifty years of political turmoil in Burma (Myanmar) has led millions of Burmese to leave their country. Many have settled in neighboring Thailand. Mae Sot, on the Mae Nam Moei (Moei River) is the center of the Burmese emigre community in central western Thailand. There are hundreds of thousands of Burmese refugees and migrants in the area. Many live a shadowy existence without papers and without recourse if they cross Thai authorities. The Burmese have their own schools and hospitals (with funding provided by NGOs). Burmese restaurants and tea houses are common in the area.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BurmeseMigrants103.jpg
  • 23 MAY 2013 - MAE SOT, TAK, THAILAND:     Burmese porters make a delivery to the Burmese market in Mae Sot, Thailand. Fifty years of political turmoil in Burma (Myanmar) has led millions of Burmese to leave their country. Many have settled in neighboring Thailand. Mae Sot, on the Mae Nam Moei (Moei River) is the center of the Burmese emigre community in central western Thailand. There are hundreds of thousands of Burmese refugees and migrants in the area. Many live a shadowy existence without papers and without recourse if they cross Thai authorities. The Burmese have their own schools and hospitals (with funding provided by NGOs). Burmese restaurants and tea houses are common in the area.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BurmeseMigrants080.jpg
  • 23 MAY 2013 - MAE SOT, TAK, THAILAND:    A Burmese Muslim woman carries her son through the Burmese market in Mae Sot, Thailand. Fifty years of political turmoil in Burma (Myanmar) has led millions of Burmese to leave their country. Many have settled in neighboring Thailand. Mae Sot, on the Mae Nam Moei (Moei River) is the center of the Burmese emigre community in central western Thailand. There are hundreds of thousands of Burmese refugees and migrants in the area. Many live a shadowy existence without papers and without recourse if they cross Thai authorities. The Burmese have their own schools and hospitals (with funding provided by NGOs). Burmese restaurants and tea houses are common in the area.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BurmeseMigrants079.jpg
  • 23 MAY 2013 - MAE SOT, TAK, THAILAND: Burmese migrants living in Thailand play dominoes in a Burmese tea house in Mae Sot, Thailand. Fifty years of political turmoil in Burma (Myanmar) has led millions of Burmese to leave their country. Many have settled in neighboring Thailand. Mae Sot, on the Mae Nam Moei (Moei River) is the center of the Burmese emigre community in central western Thailand. There are hundreds of thousands of Burmese refugees and migrants in the area. Many live a shadowy existence without papers and without recourse if they cross Thai authorities. The Burmese have their own schools and hospitals (with funding provided by NGOs). Burmese restaurants and tea houses are common in the area.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BurmeseMigrants071.jpg
  • 23 MAY 2013 - MAE SOT, TAK, THAILAND:    A Burmese man laughs while he watches Burmese go back and forth across the Moei River between Mae Sot, Thailand and Myawaddy, Myanmar. Fifty years of political turmoil in Burma (Myanmar) has led millions of Burmese to leave their country. Many have settled in neighboring Thailand. Mae Sot, on the Mae Nam Moie (Moie River) is the center of the Burmese emigre community in central western Thailand. There are hundreds of thousands of Burmese refugees and migrants in the area. Many live a shadowy existence without papers and without recourse if they cross Thai authorities. The Burmese have their own schools and hospitals (with funding provided by NGOs). Burmese restaurants and tea houses are common in the area.PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BurmeseMigrants064.jpg
  • 23 MAY 2013 - MAE SOT, TAK, THAILAND: Burmese walk down the Thai side of the Moei River in Mae Sot to catch a boat back to Myawaddy, Myanmar. Fifty years of political turmoil in Burma (Myanmar) has led millions of Burmese to leave their country. Many have settled in neighboring Thailand. Mae Sot, on the Mae Nam Moei (Moei River) is the center of the Burmese emigre community in central western Thailand. There are hundreds of thousands of Burmese refugees and migrants in the area. Many live a shadowy existence without papers and without recourse if they cross Thai authorities. The Burmese have their own schools and hospitals (with funding provided by NGOs). Burmese restaurants and tea houses are common in the area.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BurmeseMigrants055.jpg
  • 23 MAY 2013 - MAE SOT, TAK, THAILAND: Passengers help push a Burmese boat out into the Moei River so they can go back to Myanmar from Mae Sot, Thailand. Fifty years of political turmoil in Burma (Myanmar) has led millions of Burmese to leave their country. Many have settled in neighboring Thailand. Mae Sot, on the Mae Nam Moei (Moei River) is the center of the Burmese emigre community in central western Thailand. There are hundreds of thousands of Burmese refugees and migrants in the area. Many live a shadowy existence without papers and without recourse if they cross Thai authorities. The Burmese have their own schools and hospitals (with funding provided by NGOs). Burmese restaurants and tea houses are common in the area.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BurmeseMigrants067.jpg
View: 25 | All
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

Jack Kurtz, Photojournalist & Travel Photographer

  • Published Work
  • Photographs
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • Jack on Instagram
  • About
  • Contact
  • My Occasional Blog
  • Portfolios on Behance
  • Portfolio