Myanmar’s death toll from Friday’s powerful earthquake reached 1,644 amid extensive damage in the second-largest city of Mandalay, as international rescue teams arrive to help search for survivors.
The 7.7-magnitude earthquake, Myanmar’s biggest in a century, also injured more than 3,408 people while another 139 are missing, the State Administration Council said late Saturday. Authorities said about 2,300 buildings, including homes and temples collapsed, in Mandalay, which has a population of about 1.5 million.
Teams from China, India and Russia were among those who arrived with professional rescuers, medical personnel and equipment and are heading to Mandalay and the administrative capital Naypyidaw, they said. International airports in the two cities are closed until further notice.
“It was a nightmare, I am still scared,” said Kyaw Moe Aung, who witnessed the collapse of a condominium in Mandalay’s Aungmyaythazan township, where he lived. “Hundreds of buildings collapsed here and there” and “there were several aftershocks until late at night,” he said.
Most telephone lines were down due to a day-long power outage in major cities, and residents in the commercial capital of Yangon are limited to a maximum of four hours of electricity a day, according to the Electricity Supply Corporation.
More than 600 monasteries and nearly 300 pagodas in Mandalay were wrecked, as well as 60 schools and three bridges in the region. The quake also damaged some parts of Yangon-Mandalay Expressway and some dams in Upper Myanmar
Source: Bangkok Post