Myanmar earthquake toll crosses 3,000; heat and rain fuel disease risk

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Local residents receive relief supplies inside the compound of Sagaing Hospital, following a strong earthquake near its epicenter, in Sagaing, Myanmar, April 2, 2025.

Local residents receiving relief supplies inside the compound of Sagaing Hospital, following a strong earthquake near its epicentre in Sagaing, Myanmar, on April 2.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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Extreme heat and heavy rain in Myanmar could cause disease outbreaks among earthquake survivors camping in the open, global aid bodies warned on April 3, complicating rescue efforts made difficult by a civil war, as the death toll surpassed 3,000.

March 28’s 7.7-magnitude quake

, one of Myanmar’s strongest in a century, jolted a region which is home to 28 million, toppling buildings such as hospitals, flattening communities and leaving many without food, water and shelter.

Deaths rose to 3,085 on April 3, with 4,715 injured and 341 missing, the ruling junta said.

The World Health Organisation flagged a rising risk of cholera and other diseases in the worst-affected areas, such as Mandalay, Sagaing and the capital of Naypyitaw, while it prepared US$1 million (S$1.3 million) of relief supplies, including body bags.

“Cholera remains a particular concern for all of us,” said Ms Elena Vuolo, the deputy head of its Myanmar office, pointing to an outbreak in 2024 in Mandalay.

The risk was worsened by damage to about half of the healthcare facilities in the quake-hit areas, including hospitals destroyed by the quake in Mandalay and Naypyitaw, she added.

People were camping outdoors in temperatures of 38 deg C because they were too scared to go home, and many hospitals were also setting up temporary facilities there, Ms Vuolo told Reuters from Naypyitaw.

Skin disease, malaria and dengue were among the diseases that could result from prolonged crises such as that in Myanmar, she said.

But conditions could get even tougher for the huge relief effort, after weather officials warned that unseasonal rain from April 6 to 11 could threaten the areas hardest-hit by the quake.

“I’ve heard that in the next day or two there are rains (expected),” Mr Titon Mitra, the Myanmar representative of the United Nations Development Programme, told Reuters by telephone during a visit to Sagaing.

“If that hits, we’ve got people, lots of people now, in temporary shelters, makeshift camps out on the streets, and that’s going to be a real problem,” he said, also flagging the UN’s concerns about an outbreak of waterborne disease.

Despite the devastation, junta chief Min Aung Hlaing will leave his disaster-stricken country on April 3 for a rare trip to a regional summit in Bangkok, state television said.

It is an uncommon foreign visit for a general regarded as a pariah by many countries and the subject of Western sanctions and an International Criminal Court investigation.

Ceasefire

The weather extremes will add to the challenges faced by aid and rescue groups, which have called for access to all affected areas despite the strife of civil war.

The military has struggled to run Myanmar since its return to power in a 2021 coup that unseated the elected civilian government of Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi.

The generals have been internationally isolated since the takeover, and Myanmar’s economy and basic services, including healthcare, have been reduced to tatters amid the strife.

On April 2, state-run MRTV said a

unilateral government ceasefire

would take immediate effect for 20 days, to support relief efforts after the quake, but warned the authorities would “respond accordingly” if rebels launched attacks.

The move came after a major rebel alliance declared a ceasefire on April 1 to assist the humanitarian effort.

Nearly a week after the quake, searchers in neighbouring Thailand hunting for survivors combed a mountain of debris left after a skyscraper in the capital Bangkok collapsed while under construction.

Rescuers are using mechanical diggers and bulldozers to break up 100 tonnes of concrete to locate anyone still alive after the disaster that killed 15 people, with 72 still missing.

Thailand’s death toll stands at 22. REUTERS

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