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Last time you were here, you were looking to help vulnerable children and families. Your support can save and change lives.

Mya hides in the corner of her home when the quarrelling starts. 

Her mother and father have been fighting every day for four years, since she was 10 years old. Sometimes her father would come home drunk and beat her mother.

“Their fights became pretty bad when I was in Grade 8,” Mya says. “When my Dad was drunk, he shouted at everything and everyone including me, even when I was studying.

“I was scared and couldn’t learn. I was so depressed.”

A member of ChildFund Myanmar’s child protection group, which has been established in Mya’s village, heard of Mya’s situation and referred her to Htet, a case officer with ChildFund’s local partner Future Light.

For the past three months, Htet has been helping Mya and her parents access counselling. As the sole income earner for his family, Mya’s father works odd jobs and has felt the immense stress to provide for his family and support his daughter’s education. The counselling sessions, however, have helped him understand his drinking problem and the impact it is having on his life and on his family. Since attending the counselling sessions he has significantly reduced his drinking, Mya says.

He no longer beats his wife. Mya says speaking to Htet and her counsellor have helped her relieve her emotional distress and understand that she is not alone in her situation. Mya has also learnt how important it is to continue focusing on her school studies so she can realise her dream of becoming a teacher.

ChildFund’s Myanmar’s child protection projects are supported by the Australian Government through the Australian NGO Cooperation Program (ANCP).

A whistle sounds and a group of young girls begin their warm-up, running around a small field outside the local school in a village in Myanmar’s Tanintharyi region.

They are gearing up to play a friendly game of volleyball, a sight unseen before in this small remote community.

Most people in the community believe that girls and sports are “badly mismatched”, says the girls’ head coach Su. “But we wanted to show that girls can participate in sports.”

Su and her team are taking part in a ChildFund project that is helping to empower young girls in disadvantaged communities in Myanmar, through sport and leadership and life skills training. This is supported by the Australian Government through the Australian NGO Cooperation Program (ANCP).

“At first, playing volleyball was physically challenging for the girls, but over time their bodies and minds strengthened,” Su says.

The girls participating in the project are between 12 and 17 years old, an age group particularly vulnerable in rural and remote communities like Su’s to becoming isolated, dropping out of school and being forced into the workforce to help support their families.

Poverty and a lack of jobs and opportunities to develop skills in their community means many girls end up leaving school early and migrating to find work in neighbouring countries such as Thailand. In these jobs they are often abused and exploited by their employees, or trafficked.