Myanmar Muslim hospital offers hope in troubled times
Yangon’s Muslim Free Hospital see patients ranging from freed political activists to impoverished families

From political activists freed after years in Myanmar’s jails to stricken and impoverished families, all are welcome at Yangon’s Muslim Free Hospital - a symbol of unity in a country riven by religious unrest.
There is barely a space left unoccupied in the bustling medical centre. From the soot-smeared front steps, through dusty stairwells and into sweltering wards, people wait for treatments that would be beyond their reach elsewhere in Myanmar’s desperately underfunded health system.
The throngs of people - the hospital sees up to 500 outpatients a day - are a testament to the diversity of the Buddhist-majority country’s main city, with flashes of colour from Myanmar skirt-like longyis and Muslim headscarves.
“I am a surgeon so my responsibility is to cure suffering patients,” Tin Myo Win said before setting out on a tour of the wards.
Video: From political activists to impoverished families, all are welcome at a free hospital run by Muslims in Yangon