-
Vaccine gaps fuel Bangladesh's deadly measles crisis
-
Fish furore fuels fierce election in India's West Bengal
-
Coachella kicks off with headliners Sabrina Carpenter, Bieber and Karol G
-
Myanmar junta chief sworn in as president
-
Exiled cartoonists give voice to Iran's silenced millions
-
In Pakistan's mediation to end Mideast war, China may hold the key
-
Knicks stay in hunt with late win over rival Celtics
-
'Sartorial diplomacy' on show in expo of late UK queen's fashion
-
Former Japan and AC Milan star Honda laces up boots again at 39
-
Stocks rally on optimism over Iran war ceasefire, oil extends gains
-
Lego-style memes troll Trump after fragile US-Iran truce
-
Chinese slimmers trade lost fat for beef
-
Jackson biopic shows franchise thriving despite abuse claims
-
New Jersey city spurns data center as defiance spreads
-
US box office looking good as cinema owners gather: industry chief
-
Firm Masters greens make life hard on golf's finest
-
Defending champ McIlroy shares Masters lead after back-nine birdie run
-
After oil, Venezuela opens up mining to private investors
-
Tigers' Meadows in hospital after colliding with teammate
-
US to host Israel-Lebanon talks as strikes threaten Iran ceasefire
-
'Scrappy' McIlroy leans on experience for share of Masters lead
-
Ukraine and Russia will cease fire for Orthodox Easter
-
Mateta inspires Palace win over Fiorentina in Conference League
-
Pioneering US hip-hop artist Afrika Bambaataa dies at 68
-
Russia bans Nobel-winning rights group, raids independent newspaper, in one day
-
Pentagon denies giving Vatican envoy 'bitter lecture'
-
Watkins propels Villa towards Europa League semis, Forest hold Porto
-
Aston Villa on verge of Europa League semis after beating Bologna
-
Venezuela police clash with protesters demanding salary rises
-
CAF president rejects corruption claims by Senegal
-
Israel and Lebanon set for ceasefire talks next week, says US official
-
US stocks extend gains, shrugging off ceasefire worries
-
IMF chief urges nations to 'do no harm' in fiscal response to Iran war
-
Sixers' Embiid to have surgery for appendicitis - team
-
Russian police raid independent Novaya Gazeta outlet, reporter detained
-
Former heavyweight king Fury adamant 'I've still got it' as Makhmudov awaits
-
Shipping toll for Hormuz passage sharply divides nations
-
McIlroy's back-nine birdie run grabs share of Masters lead
-
Melania Trump blasts 'lies' linking her to Epstein
-
'Anxious' Tatum back at Madison Square Garden with NBA East second seed on line
-
Strait of Hormuz traffic remains becalmed despite ceasefire
-
Melania Trump denies any links to Epstein abuse
-
American Airlines targets April 30 return to Venezuela
-
Venezuela police tear-gas protesters demanding salary rises
-
Robertson to leave Liverpool at end of season
-
Choudhary smashes Lucknow to dramatic IPL win over Kolkata
-
Sean 'Diddy' Combs asks US appeals court to overturn sentence
-
Verstappen Red Bull future in doubt as engineer to join McLaren
-
France's Macron in Rome for first meeting with Pope Leo
-
Angola name former Senegal boss Cisse as new coach
Myanmar's famed Inle Lake chokes on floating farms
From a gently rocking boat, Nyunt Win tends a floating tomato crop in the cool water of Myanmar's famed Inle Lake, nestled in the Shan Hills and once the country's most popular tourist spot.
The floating farms have become as ubiquitous at the UNESCO-recognised reserve as its famed houses on stilts and leg-rowing fishermen, but locals warn that the plantations are slowly choking the lake.
The ever-expanding farms are eating up surface area, sending chemical runoff into the waters, and clogging the picturesque site with discarded plant matter, opponents say.
Nyunt Win once farmed on dry land near Inle, but he told AFP the "productivity was not great".
Several years ago he bought a share in a floating plantation and now makes 30,000 kyats ($14) per box of tomatoes.
"We're not prosperous but we can rely on this for a living," he said.
But aquaculture comes at a cost to the lake. The farms must be anchored in place and the produce shielded from the sun -- mainly by invasive water hyacinths.
The weed grows rampantly on the surface of Inle, depleting oxygen levels by blotting out light for other plants, so it makes for a free and abundant building block for plantations.
Out on the lake, Si Thu Win heaves mounds of water hyacinths and other aquatic plants from the water to shore up and protect his plants.
"The (tomato) plants do not last long if it's sunny," he says.
"To protect the roots, we have to cover them."
- Clogged shore -
Between 1992 and 2009, the portion of Inle covered by floating farms increased by 500 percent, according to a report from Myanmar's government.
And the area under cultivation has only expanded since then, residents say.
"Mass production" now means the price farmers get for their produce is lower, grumbles Si Thu Win.
The farms do not last forever and when they begin to rot, farmers cut them loose and build new ones, leaving rotting mounds of foliage to clog up the lakeshore.
Floating farms are "ruining" the lake, an official from the Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock and Irrigation told AFP, requesting anonymity.
Local authorities have tried to corral the drifting refuse into designated areas, but they do not have the resources to manage, he said.
"That's why the lake is getting narrower," the official said.
Farmers like Nyunt Win deny they are strangling the lake. They say the bigger problem is that decades of slash-and-burn agriculture on the surrounding hillsides have caused soil to wash into the streams that feed Inle, slowly filling it in.
"When I was young the water would cover the top of a 12-foot bamboo pole," he said.
Now, during the summer months he can "pick up handfuls of soil" from his boat, he said.
The farm boom has pitted tomato cultivators against the fishermen who ply the lake, with 24-year-old Nay Tun Oo alleging that chemical runoff from the crops pollutes the water.
"When I was young and attending school, the water in the lake was not that bad," he told AFP, adding that many species of fish that are good to eat can no longer be found.
A 2017 UN report found "considerable overuse of chemical fertilisers and pesticides" on floating farms, polluting the lake and damaging the surrounding ecosystem.
A new conservation law for Inle was proposed by the regional parliament in 2019 but has not progressed beyond a draft stage.
- Business -
Businesses around the lake also worry that its shrinking surface and environmental degradation will drive tourists away.
"Our Inle lake area was very big when we were young," said Kyaw Kyaw, 38, who owns a jewellery shop on the lake and employs 20 gold- and silversmiths.
"As there are too many floating farms, the water we use for drinking and washing isn't clean anymore."
Inle was once a major tourist destination, drawing around 200,000 foreigners and a million locals a year before the Covid-19 pandemic dented travel.
But there has been no recovery thanks to a military coup in 2021 and clashes between the junta and its opponents across swathes of the country.
Inle Lake lies in the southern part of Shan state, the far north of which has seen fierce fighting over the past two weeks between junta forces and ethnic armed groups.
"It has been three years already... and no foreigners are visiting here," Kyaw Kyaw said.
Some of his metalsmiths are now learning other languages so they can go abroad for work, he said, while others are now working as carpenters.
Si Thu Win said he did not want to leave the lake.
"We are just happy living in Inle," he said.
"We are also worried about the lake disappearing."
S.Gregor--AMWN