Magnitude 7.7 quake strikes Myanmar, Thailand, kills more than 140 in Myanmar, death toll likely to rise
A powerful earthquake
killed more than 140 people in Myanmar on Friday, authorities said,
toppling buildings and wrecking infrastructure across a wide area,
including a skyscraper under construction in neighbouring Thailand.
Much of the devastation was in Myanmar's second largest city, Mandalay, which lies close to the epicentre of the 7.7 magnitude quake that struck at lunchtime and was followed by a powerful aftershock and several more moderate ones.
A
rescue worker from Amarapura, an ancient city and now a township of
Mandalay, said the bodies of 30 people had been recovered from collapsed
multi-story apartment blocks.
"I
have never experienced anything like this before - our town looks like a
collapsed city," he said, estimating that about a fifth of the
buildings had been destroyed.
"We
received calls for help from people from the inside, but we cannot help
because we do not have enough manpower and machines to remove the
debris, but we will not stop working".
General
Min Aung Hlaing, leader of Myanmar's military junta, said there would
be more deaths and casualties and invited "any country" to provide help
and donations.
Speaking
at the White House later on Friday, U.S. President Donald Trump said
that he had spoken with officials in Myanmar and that his administration
would be providing some form of assistance. "We're going to be
helping," he told reporters.
In
the Thai capital Bangkok, an official said at least nine people had
been killed. Rescuers were searching through the rubble of the tower
block that collapsed.
Mandalay,
with a population of about 1.5 million, is Myanmar's ancient royal
capital and the centre of its Buddhist heartland. Rescue workers were
trying to reach dozens of monks trapped under rubble in the Phaya Taung
Monastery, said the emergency worker in Amarapura. Buildings, bridges
and roads were wrecked, residents and local media said.
State-run MRTV said at least 144 people had been killed in Myanmar and 732 injured.
The
junta is locked in a struggle to put down insurgents fighting its rule,
a situation that is likely to complicate the rescue and relief
operation.
"We
all ran out of the house as everything started shaking," a Mandalay
resident told Reuters. "I witnessed a five-storey building collapse in
front of my eyes. Everyone in my town is out on the road and no one
dares to go back inside."
A
rescue worker from the Moe Saydanar charity told Reuters it had
retrieved at least 60 bodies from monasteries and buildings in Pyinmana,
near the capital Naypyidaw, and more people were trapped.
In
the purpose-built capital itself, a 1,000-bed hospital sustained damage
and roads were left with huge fissures, state media reported.

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said the United Nations was mobilising in Southeast Asia to help those in need.
Zin
Mar Aung, the diplomatic spokesperson for the opposition National Unity
Government, said fighters from the anti-junta militias known as the
People's Defence Forces would provide humanitarian help.
A
U.S. government analysis based on the strength and depth of the quake
estimated there could be thousands of deaths and severe economic loss,
with the Sagaing and Meiktila regions worst hit.
State
media said the quake caused the collapse of buildings in five cities
and towns, as well as a railway bridge and a road bridge on the
Yangon-Mandalay Expressway. Images showed the destroyed Ava Bridge over
the Irrawaddy River, its arches leaning into the water.
A Mandalay resident said destruction stretched across the whole city, and one neighbourhood, Sein Pan, was on fire.
Roads were damaged, phone lines disrupted and there was no electricity, said the resident, who declined to be named.
At least three people died after a mosque in Taungoo partially collapsed, two witnesses said.
"We were saying prayers when the shaking started... Three died on the spot," one said.
Local
media reported a hotel in Aung Ban, in Shan state, crumbled into
rubble, with the Democratic Voice of Burma reporting two people had died
and 20 were trapped.
WORST TIME
Amnesty
International said the earthquake could not have come at a worse time
for Myanmar, given the number of displaced people, the existing need for
relief aid, and cuts to U.S. aid by the Trump administration.
Restricted
media access meant a clear picture of the extent of damage and loss
might not emerge for some time, the group's Myanmar researcher, Joe
Freeman, said.
Since
overthrowing the elected civilian government of Nobel laureate Aung San
Suu Kyi in 2021, the military has struggled to run Myanmar, leaving the
economy and basic services including healthcare in tatters.
An
armed opposition, comprising established ethnic armies and new
resistance groups formed since the coup, has seized swathes of territory
and driven the junta out of border areas, increasingly hemming it into
the central lowlands.
The fighting has displaced more than three million people in Myanmar, with widespread food insecurity and over a third of the population in need of humanitarian assistance, the U.N. says.
Myanmar
has also been hit by natural disasters in recent years, and the
internationally isolated junta has struggled to respond adequately. It
lies on the boundary of two tectonic plates and is among the world's
most seismically active countries.
Nyi
Nyi Kyaw, a Myanmar academic at the University of Bristol, said Myanmar
was "wholly unable to deal with the shock and its aftermath" due to the
breakdown in civil society.
In Bangkok,
people ran onto the streets in panic, among them hotel guests in
bathrobes and swimming costumes, as water cascaded down from an elevated
pool at a luxury hotel.
Of
the confirmed casualties in the Thai capital, eight died in the
building collapse and a ninth at another location, Bangkok Deputy
Governor Tavida Kamolvej said. The rescue operation at the building site
said over 100 people were missing.
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