BREAKING: Death toll from Myanmar-Thailand quake passes 1,000 as rescue teams search for survivors

This aerial photograph shows the site of an under-construction building collapse in Bangkok on Mar 29, 2025, a day after an earthquake struck central Myanmar and Thailand. (Photo: AFP)

The death toll from a huge earthquake that hit Myanmar and Thailand passed 1,000 on Saturday afternoon (Mar 29), as rescuers dug through the rubble of collapsed buildings in a desperate search for survivors.

The shallow 7.7-magnitude quake struck northwest of the city of Sagaing in central Myanmar early Friday afternoon, followed minutes later by a 6.7-magnitude aftershock.

The quake destroyed buildings, downed bridges, and buckled roads across swathes of Myanmar, with severe damage reported in the second biggest city, Mandalay.

In a statement on Saturday, the Myanmar junta’s information team said 1,002 people are known to have died in the quake, with 2,376 injured, AFP reported. Around 10 more deaths have been confirmed in Bangkok.

It was the biggest quake to hit Myanmar in over a century, according to US geologists, and the tremors were powerful enough to severely damage buildings across Bangkok, hundreds of kilometres away from the epicentre.

Rescuers in the Thai capital worked through the night searching for workers trapped when a 30-storey skyscraper under construction collapsed, reduced in seconds to a pile of rubble and twisted metal by the force of the shaking.

Bangkok governor Chadchart Sittipunt told AFP that around 10 people had been confirmed killed across the city, most in the skyscraper collapse.

But up to 100 workers were still unaccounted for at the building, close to the Chatuchak weekend market that is a magnet for tourists.

“We are doing our best with the resources we have because every life matters,” Chadchart told reporters at the scene.

“Our priority is acting as quickly as possible to save them all.”

Bangkok city authorities said they will deploy more than 100 engineers to inspect buildings for safety after receiving over 2,000 reports of damage.

Up to 400 people were forced to spend the night in the open air in city parks as their homes were not safe to return to, Chadchart said.Previous

People who evacuated from buildings following earthquake in Bangkok, Thailand, Mar 28, 2025. (Photo: AP/Chutima Lalit)
Patients are evacuated onto a road outside a hospital after a 7.7 magnitude earthquake in Bangkok, Thailand, Mar 28, 2025. (Photo: AP/Tadchakorn Kitchaiphon)
Workers walk past the site of a high-rise building under construction that collapsed after a strong earthquake in Bangkok, Thailand, Mar 29, 2025. (Photo: AP/Sakchai Lalit)
Rescuers search for victims at the site of a high-rise building under construction that collapsed after a strong earthquake in Bangkok, Thailand, Mar 29, 2025. (Photo: AP/Sakchai Lalit)

Significant quakes are extremely rare in Bangkok, and Friday’s tremors sent shoppers and workers rushing into the street in alarm across the city.

While there was no widespread destruction, the shaking brought some dramatic images of rooftop swimming pools sloshing their contents down the side of many of the city’s towering apartment blocks and hotels.

Even hospitals were evacuated, with one woman delivering her baby outdoors after being moved from a hospital building. A surgeon also continued to operate on a patient after evacuating, completing the operation outside, a spokesman told AFP.

RARE JUNTA PLEA FOR HELP

But the worst of the damage was in Myanmar, where four years of civil war sparked by a military coup have ravaged the healthcare and emergency response systems.

Junta chief Min Aung Hlaing issued an exceptionally rare appeal for international aid, indicating the severity of the calamity. Previous military regimes have shunned foreign assistance even after major natural disasters.

The country declared a state of emergency across the six worst-affected regions after the quake, and at one major hospital in the capital, Naypyidaw, medics were forced to treat the wounded in the open air.Previous

A soldier stands guard while vehicles navigate a damaged road caused by an earthquake, Mar 28, 2025, in Naypyitaw. (Photo: AP/The Myanmar Military True News Information Team)
Motorists ride past a damaged building after a strong earthquake struck central Myanmar, in Mandalay, Mar 28, 2025. (Photo: Reuters)
People ride motorcycles past a damaged building after a strong earthquake struck central Myanmar, in Mandalay, Mar 28, 2025. (Photo: Reuters)
Myanmar’s military leader Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing visits those injured by an earthquake on Mar 28, 2025, in Naypyitaw. (Photo: AP/The Myanmar Military True News Information Team)
A soldier stands guard while vehicles navigate a damaged road caused by an earthquake, Mar 28, 2025, in Naypyitaw. (Photo: AP/The Myanmar Military True News Information Team)
Motorists ride past a damaged building after a strong earthquake struck central Myanmar, in Mandalay, Mar 28, 2025. (Photo: Reuters)
People ride motorcycles past a damaged building after a strong earthquake struck central Myanmar, in Mandalay, Mar 28, 2025. (Photo: Reuters)
Myanmar’s military leader Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing visits those injured by an earthquake on Mar 28, 2025, in Naypyitaw. (Photo: AP/The Myanmar Military True News Information Team)
A soldier stands guard while vehicles navigate a damaged road caused by an earthquake, Mar 28, 2025, in Naypyitaw. (Photo: AP/The Myanmar Military True News Information Team)

One official described it as a “mass casualty area”.

“I haven’t seen (something) like this before. We are trying to handle the situation. I’m so exhausted now,” a doctor told AFP.

Mandalay, a city of more than 1.7 million people, appeared to have been badly hit. AFP photos showed dozens of buildings reduced to rubble.

A resident reached by phone told AFP that a hospital and a hotel had been destroyed, and said the city was badly lacking in rescue personnel.

A huge queue of buses and lorries lined up at a checkpoint to enter the capital early on Saturday.

Offers of foreign assistance began coming in, with President Donald Trump on Friday pledging US help.

“It’s terrible,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office about the quake when asked if he would respond to the appeal by Myanmar’s military rulers.

“It’s a real bad one, and we will be helping. We’ve already spoken with the country.”

India, France and the European Union offered to provide assistance, while the World Health Organization said it was mobilising to prepare trauma injury supplies.

Singapore’s Foreign Affairs Minister Vivian Balakrishnan said that the government “stands ready to extend assistance”.

“The Singapore Civil Defence Force is prepared to deploy the Operation Lionheart contingent to assist with urban search and rescue operations as well as disaster relief efforts in Myanmar, in coordination with the ASEAN Coordinating Centre for Humanitarian Assistance on Disaster Management,” he said in a Facebook post.

The Singapore Red Cross has also committed an initial S$150,000 (US$111,850) to support relief efforts in both countries, and will launch a public fundraising appeal. 


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