Powerful quake in Southeast Asia kills several, 81 trapped in Bangkok building rubble

People ride motorcycles past a damaged building after a strong earthquake struck central Myanmar, in Mandalay, Myanmar, March 28, 2025. REUTERS/Stringer
A powerful earthquake centred
in Myanmar rocked Southeast Asia on Friday, killing several people and causing
extensive damage, with rescuers in Bangkok searching for 81 people in the
rubble of a collapsed building.
At least three people were
killed in the town of Taungoo in Myanmar when a mosque partially collapsed,
witnesses said. Local media reported at least two people died and 20 were
injured after a hotel collapsed in Aung Ban.
The ruling military in Myanmar
did not give any numbers for dead and wounded. The diplomatic spokesman for the
parallel National Unity Government that opposes the junta said the quake killed
at least 12 people and more deaths were likely in the Mandalay area it hit.
Troops from the anti-junta
militias, known as the People's Defence Forces, would provide humanitarian
help, Zin Mar Aung told Reuters.
In Thailand, the defence
minister said rescuers were searching for 81 people trapped in the rubble of a
skyscraper that was under construction and collapsed into a pile of rubble.
Bangkok Governor Chadchart
Sittipunt said three people were killed at the building site. He warned of
possible aftershocks but urged people to be calm and said the situation was
largely under control.
The United States Geological
Survey (USGS) said the quake, which struck at lunchtime, was of 7.7 magnitude
and at a depth of 10 km. The epicentre was about 17 km from Mandalay, which has
a population of about 1.5 million.
The quake was followed by a
powerful aftershock and several more moderate ones.
"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 buildings."
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, Myanmar state media said. Images
showed the destroyed Ava Bridge over the Irrawaddy River, its arches leaning
into the water.
The quake will further stretch
Myanmar's ruling military, which is fighting against an armed uprising. The
junta declared a state of emergency in multiple regions but provided no
specifics of damage.
"The state will make
inquiries on the situation quickly and conduct rescue operations along with
providing humanitarian aid," it said on Telegram.
The Red Cross said roads,
bridges and buildings had been damaged in Myanmar, and there were concerns for
the state of large dams.
Mandalay is Myanmar's ancient
royal capital and at the centre of the country's Buddhist heartland.
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.
Local media outlet Myanmar Now
posted images showing a clock tower had collapsed, and part of the wall by
Mandalay Palace was in ruins. A witness, Htet Naing Oo, told Reuters that a tea
shop had collapsed with several people trapped inside.
"We couldn’t go in,"
she said. "The situation is very bad."
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.
Army-run MRTV reported that
the quake toppled buildings, crushed cars and left huge fissures on roads
across the capital Naypyitaw.
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 by the Trump
administration to U.S. aid.
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 the country, leaving the economy and basic services like
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, according to
the United Nations.
The country has also been hit
by natural disasters in recent years, including Typhoon Yagi last year and
Cyclone Mocha in 2023, and the internationally isolated junta has struggled to
respond adequately.
Nyi Nyi Kyaw, a Myanmar
academic at the University of Bristol, said the earthquake had struck "at
a moment when Myanmar is at its most vulnerable ... in decades".
Civil society had largely fled
following the coup and those community-based organisations that remained were
unable to manage the disaster relief effort, he said.
"In essence, Myanmar is
wholly unable to deal with the shock and its aftermath," he said.
OFFICE TOWER SHAKES IN
BANGKOK
In the Thai capital, people
ran out onto the streets in panic, many of them hotel guests in bathrobes and
swimming costumes, as water cascaded down from an elevated pool at a luxury
hotel, witnesses said.
The Stock Exchange of Thailand
suspended all trading activities for the Friday afternoon session.
One office tower in downtown
Bangkok swayed from side to side for at least two minutes, with doors and
windows creaking loudly, witnesses said.
"At first, I didn’t
realise (it was an earthquake)," office worker Varunyou Armarttayakul told
Reuters.
"But then I saw the table
shaking, and the chair and computer started swaying, too...Part of the ceiling
even collapsed — that’s when I had to run out.”
China's Xinhua news agency
said strong tremors were felt in southwestern Yunnan province, which borders
Myanmar, but there were no reports of casualties.
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