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Myanmar earthquake survivors plead for more help as death toll rises

A collapsed building in Sagaing, Myanmar
A collapsed building in Sagaing, Myanmar

Desperate Myanmar earthquake survivors pleaded for more aid as the death toll rose and calls grew for the junta to halt attacks on rebels as the country battles the crisis.

The shallow 7.7-magnitude earthquake on Friday flattened buildings across Myanmar, killing more than 2,800 people and making thousands more homeless.

Several leading armed groups fighting the government have suspended hostilities during the quake recovery, but junta chief Min Aung Hlaing said military operations would continue - despite international criticism of multiple reported air strikes.

UN agencies, rights groups and foreign governments have urged all sides in Myanmar's civil war to stop fighting and focus on helping those affected by the quake, the biggest to hit the country in decades.

Journalists saw chaotic scenes as at least 200 desperate people lined up for aid distribution in Sagaing, the city closest to the epicentre of the quake, some running through traffic to join the queues.

A truck trying to distribute food aid in Sagaing, Myanmar

Destruction in the city is widespread, with the World Health Organization (WHO) reporting that one in three houses have collapsed, and five days after the quake locals complained of a lack of help.

"Of course, we don't have enough," said Ayethi Kar, 63, head of a school for young nuns razed to the ground by the tremors.

"Now we eat donated food and water, but we sleep on the ground."

Healthcare facilities, damaged by the quake and with limited capacity, are "overwhelmed by a large number of patients", while supplies of food, water and medicine are running low, the WHO said in its latest update, issued yesterday.

Hopes of finding more survivors are fading, but there were moments of joy today as two men were pulled alive from the ruins of a hotel in the capital Naypyidaw.

One of the men, a 26-year-old hotel worker was extracted by a joint Myanmar-Turkish team shortly after midnight, the fire service and junta said.

Dazed and dusty but conscious, the man was pulled through a hole in the rubble and put on a stretcher, a video posted on Facebook by the Myanmar Fire Services Department shows.

Construction equipment clearing rubble at the site of a collapsed building in Sagaing

Call for peace

The junta said Wednesday that the death toll had risen to 2,886, with more than 4,600 injured and 373 still missing.

But with patchy communication and infrastructure delaying efforts to gather information and deliver aid, the full scale of the disaster has yet to become clear, and the toll is likely to rise.

Relief groups say the overall quake response has been hindered by continued fighting between the junta and the complex patchwork of armed groups opposed to its rule, which began after the military seized power in a 2021 coup.

Julie Bishop, the UN special envoy on Myanmar, called on all sides to "focus their efforts on the protection of civilians, including aid workers, and the delivery of life-saving assistance".

Even before Friday's earthquake, 3.5 million people were displaced by the fighting, many of them at risk of hunger, according to the United Nations.


Read more: Who is giving aid to Myanmar after the earthquake?


Junta chief Min Aung Hlaing said there has been sabotage to Myanmar's electricity supply

Yesterday, an alliance of three of Myanmar's most powerful ethnic minority armed groups announced a one-month pause in hostilities to support humanitarian efforts in response to the quake.

The announcement by the Three Brotherhood Alliance followed a separate partial ceasefire called by the People's Defence Force - civilian groups that took up arms after the coup to fight junta rule.

But there have been multiple reports of junta air strikes against rebel groups since the quake.

"We are aware that some ethnic armed groups are currently not engaged in combat but are organising and training to carry out attacks," said junta leader Min Aung Hlaing, mentioning sabotage against the electricity supply.

"Since such activities constitute attacks, the Tatmadaw (armed forces) will continue to carry out necessary defensive activities," he said in a statement.

Search and rescue efforts continue at the construction site of a skyscraper that collapsed following the earthquake in Bangkok

A junta spokesman said soldiers fired warning shots yesterday when a Chinese Red Cross convoy failed to stop while approaching a village in conflict-ridden Shan state to deliver aid to earthquake victims.

The UN special rapporteur on human rights in Myanmar, Tom Andrews, rejected the junta's characterisation of its operations.

"Senior General Min Aung Hlaing has described ongoing junta attacks in the midst of Myanmar's suffering as 'necessary protective measures'," he wrote on X.

"They are neither necessary nor protective. They are outrageous and should be condemned in the strongest possible terms by world leaders."

Thailand toll rises

Australia's government decried the reported air strikes, saying they "exacerbated the suffering of the people".

Amnesty International said "inhumane" military attacks were significantly complicating earthquake relief efforts in Myanmar.

People make meals for volunteers near the site of the collapsed skyscraper in Bangkok

"You cannot ask for aid with one hand and bomb with the other," said the group's Myanmar researcher Joe Freeman.

Hundreds of kilometres away, in the Thai capital Bangkok, workers continued to scour through the rubble of a 30-storey skyscraper that was still being built when it collapsed on Friday.

The death toll at the site has risen to 22, with more than 70 still believed trapped in the rubble.


Watch: Woman saved in Myanmar capital after trapped by quake for 91 hours


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