At least 75 people were killed when a strong earthquake struck Myanmar, officials said yesterday, with fears that the toll would rise as news filtered through from remote areas still cut off.
Tremors were felt as far away as Bangkok, almost 800km from the epicenter, Hanoi and parts of China when the earthquake hit late on Thursday, which the US Geological Survey (USGS) measured at magnitude 6.8.
A Myanmar official said 74 people were killed and 110 were injured in five areas close to the epicenter. More than 240 buildings had collapsed.
Photo: Reuters
“We are trying to reach the remote areas,” the official said.
“The military, police and local authorities are trying to find some people injured in those affected areas, but the roads are still closed,” the official said.
Across the border, Thai authorities said a 52-year-old woman was killed in Mae Sai District after a wall in her house collapsed. Terrified residents across the region fled their homes, buildings swayed and hospitals and schools were evacuated.
In Yangon, Chris Herink, Myanmar country director for the charity World Vision, said there did not appear to be “catastrophic infrastructure damage” in the affected areas of Kengtung and Tachileik, although buildings were cracked and water supplies disrupted in some parts.
“Of real concern though are the more rural areas. There will be more, I am afraid to say, unhappy information coming throughout the day,” he said.
“It is a hilly area near the border between Thailand and Laos, the so-called Golden Triangle. There is a lot of commerce that goes on in the area,” he said.
World Vision helps care for about 7,000 children sponsored by overseas donors in the affected areas.
“We want to ensure that they and their families are safe, secure and accounted for and to offer assistance to them as a first priority, but also to help anyone in the area that has humanitarian needs,” he said.
The quake struck 90km north of Chiang Rai and 235km north to northeast of Chiang Mai, a popular tourist destination in Thailand.
Thailand’s meteorological department yesterday said it had registered six large aftershocks following the initial quake.
Residents in Chiang Rai City raced from their homes again yesterday morning as a large tremor again shook the ground.
Four pagodas in the historic town of Chiang Saen near the northern Thai border were damaged, including Chedi Luang, where its 3m long pinnacle crashed to the ground.
The shaking was felt throughout China’s southwestern province of Yunnan, according to state-run China National Radio, but no casualties or major structural damage had been reported as of yesterday morning.
However, the quake reportedly caused cracks in some homes and schools in and around the rugged Xishuangbanna region that borders Myanmar, and fear of aftershocks forced many people in the area to spend the night outdoors.
Some residents of the Vietnamese capital, Hanoi, fled their homes when the quake shook the city.
Le Huy Minh, assistant director of the national Global Geophysics Institute in the capital, reported no victims or damage.
“There was big panic among the local residents,” as high buildings shook for half a minute, said Nguyen Thai Son, of the institute’s office in the northwestern town of Dien Bien, 350km from the epicenter.
There were “neither victims nor material losses here,” he added.
Laos government spokesman Khenthong Nuanthasing said there had been no reports of casualties in his country from the earthquake.
“In Vientiane it was not strong,” he said.
The quake comes two weeks after Japan was hit by a monster earthquake and tsunami that left about 27,000 people dead or missing and triggered a crisis at its Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant.
Myanmar and Japan sit on different tectonic plates, separated by the vast Eurasian plate.
No tsunami warning was issued after the Myanmar quake as US seismologists said it was too far inland to generate a devastating wave in the Indian Ocean.
The USGS initially recorded the quake as magnitude 7.0, but later revised it down to 6.8.
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