Latest news After the earthquake: Smell of corpses spreads in Myanmar

SDA

31.3.2025 - 05:20

A damaged building can be seen after the earthquake. Photo: Thein Zaw/AP/dpa
A damaged building can be seen after the earthquake. Photo: Thein Zaw/AP/dpa
Keystone

Three days after the severe earthquake in Myanmar, which affected neighboring Thailand, rescue and search operations are continuing in both countries.

Keystone-SDA

The situation is particularly confusing in the crisis country of Myanmar, where a brutal military junta rules and the flow of information is difficult. In the morning, state television initially gave no new figures on the number of fatalities and missing persons.

Most recently, the military government had spoken of 1,700 dead, around 3,400 injured and 300 missing. Friday's quake, whose epicenter was near the second-largest city of Mandalay in the center of former Burma, had a magnitude of 7.7.

No international media allowed

The aid organization Save the Children reported that many families had sought refuge in monasteries and on football pitches for fear of aftershocks. Meanwhile, numerous damaged roads and interrupted communication lines made relief efforts more difficult. At the same time, the junta, which had seized power at the beginning of 2021, had banned international media from accessing the disaster area, wrote the news agency Mynamar Now, citing General Zaw Min Htun.

Local media reported that residents in the particularly hard-hit Sagaing region were searching for missing people themselves because the rescue workers were unable to reach them. According to the news service Mizzima News, many people are still trapped in collapsed monasteries. At the same time, there is a bad smell of corpses in the air in the area.

Time is running out in Bangkok

In Bangkok, meanwhile, rescue teams continue to search feverishly for almost 80 missing people in a collapsed building shell. The teams are using excavators and sniffer dogs. Relatives waited desperately in front of the mountain of rubble that is still left of the 30-storey tower block. The 72 hours that trapped people can normally survive without food and water will soon be reached.

According to the city authorities, another body was recently recovered from the rubble. This brings the total death toll in the Thai capital to 18.

Quake also near Tonga

A severe earthquake was also reported near the island state of Tonga in the South Pacific. The US earthquake observatory USGS gave the magnitude of the earth tremors early Monday morning (local time) as 7.0. The center was located 73 kilometers from the city of Pangai at a depth of 29 kilometers. There were initially no reports of damage or casualties. Radio New Zealand reported that it was the strongest quake in Tonga for ten years. There were also several strong aftershocks. However, an original tsunami warning was lifted.