Inspiring Myanmar Trash Hero Kids!

by Seema on 23/08/2019 No comments

Our volunteer, Aung Win from Trash Hero Ngapali in Myanmar, took the Trash Hero kids book to his class at the Vera Thomson School. He writes: “the books are totally great. The kids were really keen on reading them. Thanks million for the books. As you know, they have already finished reading them. We have asked the students to write about it what they have learnt , why they should keep the ocean clean. They all have done some essays about it.”

And we are very proud to publish some of them here. The children not only learned about the environment, but are learning English via the books. Great job!

Above: Kay Thawe Lwin, 14

Above: Ei Ei Nwe, 15

Above, Mee Mee Lay, 13

Above, Lin Lin Than, 14

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SeemaInspiring Myanmar Trash Hero Kids!

Trash Heroes in Myanmar Integral to Nation’s Ambitions for a Sustainable Future

by Leslie Finlay on 05/06/2019 1 comment

Our Trash Heroes in Myanmar met President U Win Myint at a World Environment Day event in Nay Pyi Taw. The President was originally introduced to Trash Hero in 2018, then honoring the growing national movement and its local chapters for their fantastic work, and for promoting the spirit of sustainability within their individual communities. 

Trash Hero Myanmar Updates President U Win Myint on the year’s project successes

Addressing more than 400 stakeholders representing state and regional ministries, academic institutions, businesses, and special interest groups, the President urged the Burmese people to look at their own relationships with waste in their everyday lives. His message mirrored the spirit of the Trash Hero mission: that lasting, high-level change occurs from collective adjustments to our mindset and behaviours. 

The President’s message is supported by a record of growing public action and awareness against waste. Myanmar’s first Trash Hero community clean was organized in Yangon in July 2016, coordinating 135 volunteers who collected more than 400 kg of rubbish. Today, Trash Hero Myanmar has expanded to 10 national chapters, who together have collected 46,517 kilograms of trash with the help of almost 17,000 volunteers – more than 5,000 of which are children.

The President’s support for movements like Trash Hero is predicated on a national ambition to develop the country as a climate-resilient, low-carbon, low-waste society.

Trash Hero Myanmar has grown quickly with 10 national chapters actively reducing the waste problem in their communities

He announced two new policies that recognize the increasing threat of extreme weather and other climate change impacts this economic and social development. These policies – called the National Environmental Policy and the Myanmar Climate Change Policy – recognize the need for collaboration among ministries, civil society, businesses, and academia. But the President also highlights the importance of public participation – through initiatives like Trash Hero – to establish a sustainable national mindset.

I would like to urge Myanmar citizens, including all of you, to participate for the current and future sustainable development of our country by changing your daily lifestyles in order to support environmental conservation,” he said while addressing participants at the World Environment Day event.

The Heroes of Trash Hero Myanmar in Action!

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Leslie FinlayTrash Heroes in Myanmar Integral to Nation’s Ambitions for a Sustainable Future

Myanmar President Calls Trash Hero “Fantastic”

by Leslie Finlay on 12/06/2018 1 comment

Last week for World Environment Day the Trash Hero Myanmar team with Myanmar President Win Myint during a nationwide event called “Beat Plastic Pollution,” a much-needed push by the government to seek unified support from citizens, volunteer groups, and government bodies to tackle the mounting problem of waste in the country.

In the capital of Nay Pyi Taw, heroes from Mandalay, Yangon, Lashio, and Ngapali chapters presented on their ongoing projects and efforts to an incredibly supportive response from government leaders. The President himself described their work as “fantastic,” highlighting the need for such young, active, energetic heroes committed to fighting the imminent threat plastic pollution poses to our environment.

Myanmar’s National TV – MRTV – showcased Trash Hero Myanmar’s activities along with the efforts of other local groups urging the government to follow through on its consideration of legislation to reduce waste and improve waste management systems.

mrtv news

၂၀၁၈ ခုႏွစ္၊ ကမၻာ့ပတ္၀န္းက်င္ထိန္းသိမ္းေရးေန႔ အခမ္းအနားကို ေနျပည္ေတာ္တြင္က်င္းပ‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗‗(Unicode Version)၂၀၁၈ ခုနှစ်၊ ကမ္ဘာ့ပတ်ဝန်းကျင်ထိန်းသိမ်းရေးနေ့ အခမ်းအနားကို နေပြည်တော်တွင်ကျင်းပ

Gepostet von MRTV am Dienstag, 5. Juni 2018

Kyaw Zin John Myo, a Hero from the Mandalay chapter, said that to date the chapter has attracted more than 1,000 volunteers and 150 kids who have collected 6,650 kilograms of trash over 28 cleanups, with more and more people showing interest each cleanup. This year, he said, the group aims to focus even more on education, having already held training sessions on “how to live a Trash Hero life” in Ostello Bello Hostel in Mandalay as well as a local Monastic school.

“This year we will focus on both ‘We Clean’ and ‘We Educate,’” he said. “We are actively working with young people, university students, and also the government.”

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Leslie FinlayMyanmar President Calls Trash Hero “Fantastic”