
Downpours drench homeless survivors of Myanmar deadly quake
Heavy rains have lashed the Myanmar region stricken by last month's earthquake, aid officials said on Wednesday, drenching homeless survivors and bogging down relief efforts.
Some 60,000 people are living in tent encampments in central Myanmar, according to the UN, three weeks after a 7.7-magnitude tremor damaged and destroyed thousands of homes and killed at least 3,700 people.
Downpours around 7:00 pm on Tuesday flooded streets and camps in and around Mandalay, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) said.
The city — Myanmar's second most populous — suffered heavy damage in the March 28 disaster with apartment blocks collapsed, religious institutes demolished and hotels razed by the shallow quake.
AFP journalists in Mandalay over the weekend saw hundreds of people living under plastic gazebos and draped tarpaulins, perched on cardboard in makeshift homes that offered little protection from the elements.
"When these downpours happen the conditions just get really worse," IFRC Myanmar delegation chief Nadia Khoury told AFP.
Myanmar is in the midst of its "Thingyan" festival which typically celebrates the new year with water-splashing rituals symbolising cleansing and renewal.
But celebrations have been muted as the nation mourns, while relief workers and homeless families are fretting over the summer's oncoming monsoon season.
"The conditions are challenging. We are worried about the rains arriving," said Khoury, who has visited the worst affected sites -- where the IFRC is working with the Myanmar Red Cross -- for the past two days.
"This effort needs to be as fast as possible, to get people into some form of permanent shelter, with good sanitary facilities and drinking water."
Myanmar's central belt is blanketed by at least two and a half million tonnes of debris, according to the UN, which says two million people have been pushed into "critical need of assistance and protection".
Many homes remain standing but have suffered cracks, with families too fearful to return as the region is still rattled by regular aftershocks.
Daytime temperatures have soared as high as 44 degrees Celsius (111 degrees Fahrenheit), piling more misery on survivors in the country which is also beset by a brutal civil war following a 2021 coup.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Al Etihad
3 days ago
- Al Etihad
Hurricane Erick strengthens as it barrels toward Mexico
19 June 2025 09:04 PUERTP ESCONDIDO (AFP)Hurricane Erick barreled down on Mexico's Pacific coast on Wednesday, having strengthened to a powerful Category 3 storm, the US National Hurricane Centre said, warning of potentially deadly is expected to bring "potentially destructive winds and life-threatening flash floods to portions of southern Mexico" late Wednesday and Thursday, the centre's latest bulletin 0000 GMT, Erick was moving northwest at a speed of nearly 15 kilometres per hour with maximum sustained winds approaching 195 km/h and higher gusts. The hurricane is expected to strengthen before making landfall, bringing with it storm surges, coastal flooding, and destructive warned of intense rainfall across the Mexican states of Oaxaca and Guerrero, which is expected to bring "life-threatening flooding and mudslides."Mexican authorities said they were also expecting heavy rain in Chiapas Claudia Sheinbaum urged people to avoid going out and advised those living in low-lying areas or near rivers to move to Acapulco, a major port and resort city famous for its nightlife, police with bullhorns walked the beach and drove around town warning residents and holidaymakers of the storm's shops boarded up their windows and operators of tourist boats brought their vessels began in the late afternoon after a sunny day. About 400 kilometres south of Acapulco, the city of Puerto Escondido and its 30,000 inhabitants braced for the hurricane's effects. Restaurants were already closed despite tourists unwilling to give up their vacations, an AFP journalist noted from the scene."They say it's going to hit this side of the coast, so we're taking precautions to avoid having any regrets later," Adalberto Ruiz, a 55-year-old fisherman sheltering his boat, told Velazquez, national coordinator of civil protection, said the government was using patrols and social media to warn 2,000 temporary shelters have been set up in Chiapas, Guerrero, and Oaxaca, and hundreds of troops and electricity workers have been deployed to help with any clean-up authorities have suspended classes and closed ports along the coast, including the port of Acapulco, to sees major storms every year, usually between May and November, on both its Pacific and Atlantic October 2023, Acapulco was pummeled by Hurricane Otis, a powerful Category 5 storm that killed at least 50 people. Hurricane John, another Category 3 storm that hit Acapulco in September last year, caused about 15 deaths.


Middle East Eye
4 days ago
- Middle East Eye
New series of strong blasts heard in Tehran
A series of strong blasts have been heard in east Tehran, according to AFP on Wednesday. At least five columns of smoke could be seen in the east and southeast of the Iranian capital, according to an AFP journalist, who reported the blasts were heard around 3:50pm local time.


Al Etihad
6 days ago
- Al Etihad
One dead after 6.1-magnitude earthquake in Peru
15 June 2025 23:57 Lima (AFP)A 6.1-magnitude earthquake struck Peru on Sunday, killing one person and triggering landslides, officials quake hit shortly before noon and was centered around 30 kilometers (20 miles) from Callao, a port city next to the capital Lima, the National Seismological Center said. The US Geological Survey put the magnitude at said the tremor had not generated a tsunami warning.A man died in Lima when a wall fell on the car he was driving, the National Police TV channel Latina showed footage of landslides in several areas of the capital quake also prompted a suspension of a major football game being played in lies on the so-called Ring of Fire, a stretch of intense seismic and volcanic activity around the Pacific averages at least 100 detectable earthquakes every last big one, in 2021 in the Amazon region, had a magnitude of 7.5, left 12 people injured and destroyed more than 70 homes. A devastating quake in 1970 in the northern Ancash region of Peru killed around 67,000 people.