Tragic Myanmar earthquake death toll hits 1,700 amid rescue challenges, civil unrest

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Rescue teams abandoned hope of finding survivors Monday as the death toll from Friday’s catastrophic 7.7-magnitude earthquake climbed past 1,700 across Myanmar and Thailand.

The quake devastated central Myanmar’s Mandalay region, home to 1.7 million residents, while collapsing a Bangkok high-rise and leaving thousands displaced.

In Mandalay, emergency crews struggled through buckled roads and debris-choked streets as aftershocks rattled nerves.

Families sheltered in makeshift camps for a third night, clutching children under tarps while avoiding unstable buildings.

The military junta confirmed over 1,700 deaths nationwide and declared a week of mourning, though 300 remain missing.

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Meanwhile, Thailand mourned 18 fatalities, including 11 crushed in a collapsed Bangkok tower.

Hospitals overflowed as temperatures soared to 40°C (104°F). Mandalay’s main hospital evacuated patients to its parking lot, where medics treated injuries under flimsy tarps.

“We’re doing everything possible,” said an exhausted doctor, fanning a patient with bandaged limbs.

The heat accelerated body decomposition, complicating identification efforts as relatives searched morgues.

Myanmar’s military leaders made a rare plea for international aid despite ongoing civil war.

The World Health Organization mobilized $8 million for urgent medical supplies, while the Red Cross sought $100 million for recovery.

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However, damaged bridges and active airstrikes hampered relief.

Ethnic rebels reported seven fighters killed in post-quake bombings, underscoring the crisis’ complexity.

Amid the chaos, resilience flickered.

Vendors reopened stalls in Mandalay’s less-damaged districts, and Muslims gathered near a shattered mosque for Eid prayers.

“We’ll rebuild,” said a shopkeeper sweeping glass, though fear lingered as aftershocks sent crowds fleeing.

In Bangkok, rain soaked rescue crews digging through a collapsed high-rise where 76 remain missing.

“We’re still hopeful,” said a firefighter, though survival odds dwindled hourly.

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The disaster exposed Myanmar’s fragility after years of civil war, with 3.5 million already displaced and infrastructure in ruins.

As recovery begins, survivors face monumental challenges: contaminated water, scarce medicine, and monsoon rains threatening camps.

“This quake broke us, but not our spirit,” said a Mandalay teacher cooking communal meals.

Yet with communications down and roads impassable, remote villages remain cut off, their losses still uncounted.

Both nations now confront a long, arduous path to healing landscapes and lives shattered in seconds.

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