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Rescuers race the clock as Myanmar earthquake death toll climbs past 1,700 | Earthquakes News

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Three days after devastating quake, rescue teams lacking equipment to sift through the debris and help survivors.

Myanmar has raised the death toll from last week’s devastating earthquake to more than 1,700.

The country’s military-led government announced the raised casualty count on Sunday and declared a weeklong mourning period from Monday. Meanwhile, the search and rescue effort was reportedly being slowed by a lack of resources and equipment and damaged infrastructure.

The magnitude 7.7 earthquake hit Myanmar at midday on Friday, causing widespread damage, including in the capital Naypitaw. A second, magnitude 6.4 tremor followed shortly afterwards.

INTERACTIVE-MYANMAR-EARTHQUAKE DEATH TOLL-March 30-2025 - 12-30 GMT -1743338958
INTERACTIVE-MYANMAR-EARTHQUAKE DEATH TOLL-March 30-2025 – 12-30 GMT -1743338958 (Al Jazeera)

The earthquake’s epicentre was about 17km (11 miles) west of the country’s second-largest city, Mandalay, which has a population of nearly 1.5 million.

Government spokesman Major-General Zaw Min Tun told state-run MRTV on Monday that at least 3,400 people have been injured and more than 300 are missing in the Mandalay region, where tremors damaged infrastructure like mosques, bridges and the city’s airport.

The earthquake also shook neighbouring Thailand and killed at least 18 people, many at a construction site in Bangkok where a partially built high-rise collapsed.

Slowed rescue effort

Rescuers have expressed concern that the effort to find survivors is facing problems and noted that most survivors need to be rescued within three days of such a disaster if they are to live.

Myanmar’s neighbours – including India, China, Malaysia, and Singapore – have dispatched aircraft and warships carrying relief supplies.

Wai Phyo, a rescue worker in Myanmar, told Al Jazeera that recovery teams in Mandalay were doing their best but were overwhelmed by the scale of destruction and the lack of “proper equipment”.

The true number of people killed and injured across the region is probably many times the official figure but with telecommunication outages, little is known about the damage in many areas.

“We’re really not clear on the scale of the destruction at this stage,” Lauren Ellery, deputy director of programs in Myanmar for the International Rescue Committee, told the AP news agency.

There is a state of emergency in six regions, and Ellery said damaged infrastructure and ongoing landslides caused by the quake were complicating operations.

“They were talking about a town near Mandalay where 80% of the buildings were reportedly collapsed, but it wasn’t in the news because telecommunications have been slow,” she said.

A lack of heavy machinery has also slowed search and rescue operations, forcing many to slowly search for survivors by hand in the relentless heat, with daily temperatures above 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit).



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