‘Wherever I looked I saw collapsed buildings’: Myanmar quake rescuers and medics struggle with size of task

2 days ago 6

The scale of devastation in central Myanmar is unlike anything rescue workers or medics have seen before, even in a country that has endured more than four years of brutal conflict.

In Sagaing, buildings have collapsed almost everywhere after Friday’s earthquake. Even the provincial fire department building has been destroyed, damaging all the rescue machinery and vehicles inside.

There are not enough rescue teams to retrieve the dead bodies, nor is there sufficient equipment to sift through debris.

“It’s been two days, and the smell is starting to emanate,” said Ma Ei, who has helped in the humanitarian efforts. “We haven’t received any help because of the internet and phone connection outages. At the moment, only the residents are involved in the rescue work, and we urgently need more rescue workers.”

They also need dry food, drinking water and medicines, she added.

Sagaing hospital’s buildings have been damaged, forcing patients outside in the searing heat. Until Sunday there were no tents to protect them from the sun, said Ma Ei.

Before and after satellite images show devastation caused by Myanmar earthquake – video

She saw about 200 patients who arrived at Sagaing hospital in the immediate aftermath of the earthquake. “There may be more patients than this,” she said. Most have broken limbs and head injuries. “Some patients with pre-existing chronic diseases are suffering even more,” she added.

Ko Doe, a member of a local rescue team in Sagaing, said rescue machinery had been damaged in the quake, but that his team began the rescue work “as soon as we received some machinery from the government and did not stop until yesterday morning”. Even with the extra supplies, however, they only have four cranes for the whole township.

Rescue teams are battling with supply shortages, power outages, connection disruptions and broken roads – they are also working under a repressive military junta. Generals seized power in a coup in 2021, triggering a spiralling conflict. The military has suffered humiliating losses in its fight against an armed resistance made up of civilian groups that formed after the coup to fight for the return of democracy, and ethnic armed groups that have long sought independence.

Quake map

Air strikes – a daily occurrence as the regime tries to stamp out opposition – continued even after the earthquake on Friday. In military-controlled areas, the junta routinely arrests anyone it suspects of opposing its rule, and people live in fear of being rounded up or forcibly conscripted to fight for the junta.

“Some rescue workers do not dare to give help because they are afraid of being arrested,” said a local person in Sagaing town who asked not to be named.

The man added that his friend had been admitted to a military hospital – a prospect many civilians would want to avoid. The other public hospital was too overrun. “He could have died if he was not sent because gangrene had set in his wound,” the person said.

Two women stand under a parasol in front of collapsed buildings
People stand next to a damaged building in Mandalay. Photograph: Sai Aung Main/AFP/Getty Images

Normally patients in Sagaing who require more complex treatments would be sent from Sagaing to Mandalay, Myanmar’s second biggest city, which has the largest hospital in upper Myanmar. However, roads and key bridges have been badly damaged. Even if they make it, the city’s general hospital is badly overstretched.

“I am middle-aged and I’ve experienced a lot of incidents, but never been busy like this before. This is very severe,” said a doctor at Mandalay general hospital, who spoke on condition of anonymity. He remembers standing in downtown Mandalay after the quake: “Wherever I looked, east, west, south, north, I saw collapsed buildings and only dust,” he said. One medic was knocked off their feet while doing surgery because the shaking was so violent.

Rescue operations underway in Thailand and Myanmar after earthquake – video

All patients at Mandalay hospital have been evacuated and are being treated outside. Those who cannot manage the intense heat have been placed near an entrance, so they can be easily moved. Some patients have been sent home because they are too traumatised to stay near the hospital building, fearing the collapsed ceilings and broken tiles, he said.

The UN has warned of “a severe shortage of medical supplies” including trauma kits, blood bags, anaesthetics, assistive devices, essential medicines, and tents for health workers.

The doctor at Mandalay hospital said supplies had not run out yet. “We can provide necessary IV drips and injections,” he said, adding they also had blood supplies. But it was less clear the hospital had enough resources for the surgeries needed by patients, he said.

Doctors and medics teams treat a woman laid under a blanket
Doctors and medics teams treat a victim trapped under the rubble of the destroyed Sky Villa development in Mandalay. Photograph: Sai Aung Main/AFP/Getty Images

In areas outside the main cities, the situation appears worse. In Sagaing, Ei Hnin Phway said aid had yet to arrive. “We can’t even post updates on Facebook about what happening,” she said, citing the bad connections.

Ko Doe said his team had recovered 190 bodies so far, but he believed many more remained trapped. Work continued urgently on Sunday, he said. His team was due to attend a monastery, a Buddhist summer school, a private school and a nunnery school, where bodies remained trapped, he said. Many were children.

“The chances of survival are very low,” he said.

Read Entire Article
International | Politik|