The Japan Times - Myanmar quake: what we know

EUR -
AED 3.96814
AFN 76.621616
ALL 99.107153
AMD 422.178508
ANG 1.934074
AOA 986.919445
ARS 1159.359017
AUD 1.728442
AWG 1.944653
AZN 1.839219
BAM 1.952002
BBD 2.180168
BDT 131.22587
BGN 1.951708
BHD 0.407237
BIF 3209.085334
BMD 1.080363
BND 1.449593
BOB 7.488429
BRL 6.157547
BSD 1.079699
BTN 92.290418
BWP 14.812178
BYN 3.533624
BYR 21175.110602
BZD 2.16888
CAD 1.55522
CDF 3100.641314
CHF 0.954554
CLF 0.026497
CLP 1016.815502
CNY 7.840946
CNH 7.863156
COP 4520.778077
CRC 540.353559
CUC 1.080363
CUP 28.629614
CVE 110.049842
CZK 24.957497
DJF 191.897486
DKK 7.460834
DOP 68.018277
DZD 144.519246
EGP 54.642377
ERN 16.205442
ETB 141.857069
FJD 2.523133
FKP 0.834615
GBP 0.836514
GEL 2.981462
GGP 0.834615
GHS 16.694455
GIP 0.834615
GMD 77.237453
GNF 9323.6678
GTQ 8.335317
GYD 225.778537
HKD 8.407015
HNL 27.70011
HRK 7.529484
HTG 143.778161
HUF 401.587215
IDR 17922.297853
ILS 4.014941
IMP 0.834615
INR 92.399532
IQD 1415.711988
IRR 45378.075694
ISK 142.584698
JEP 0.834615
JMD 170.109339
JOD 0.76597
JPY 161.917755
KES 139.943857
KGS 93.343361
KHR 4319.367042
KMF 489.321777
KPW 972.326092
KRW 1588.602262
KWD 0.333776
KYD 0.885904
KZT 543.894568
LAK 23421.133535
LBP 96746.349742
LKR 319.9278
LRD 215.776631
LSL 19.88986
LTL 3.190031
LVL 0.653501
LYD 5.223546
MAD 10.407246
MDL 19.370954
MGA 5024.953514
MKD 61.224225
MMK 2268.763772
MNT 3768.622524
MOP 8.655167
MRU 42.992697
MUR 49.243605
MVR 16.702381
MWK 1872.611554
MXN 22.149491
MYR 4.793454
MZN 69.019834
NAD 19.88986
NGN 1659.190067
NIO 39.567776
NOK 11.358114
NPR 147.908552
NZD 1.905351
OMR 0.41599
PAB 1.080363
PEN 3.953338
PGK 4.409623
PHP 61.982166
PKR 302.549064
PLN 4.15985
PYG 8637.833821
QAR 3.932497
RON 4.963969
RSD 116.881013
RUB 91.775215
RWF 1523.405019
SAR 4.051056
SBD 9.182855
SCR 15.873101
SDG 647.043556
SEK 10.855712
SGD 1.450346
SHP 0.848996
SLE 24.616087
SLL 22654.668607
SOS 617.066867
SRD 39.368376
STD 22361.328423
SVC 9.452873
SYP 14046.847759
SZL 19.88986
THB 36.618423
TJS 11.742036
TMT 3.78076
TND 3.359354
TOP 2.600764
TRY 41.007703
TTD 7.331863
TWD 35.890881
TZS 2868.940698
UAH 44.825864
UGX 3959.409291
USD 1.080363
UYU 45.50153
UZS 13950.912139
VES 74.837184
VND 27608.803193
VUV 132.610685
WST 3.038968
XAF 652.429036
XAG 0.031764
XAU 0.000345
XCD 2.91698
XDR 0.814975
XOF 652.429036
XPF 119.331742
YER 265.520881
ZAR 19.856733
ZMK 9724.558906
ZMW 30.756781
ZWL 347.876376
  • RYCEF

    -0.0100

    9.69

    -0.1%

  • RBGPF

    1.0000

    68

    +1.47%

  • CMSC

    -0.0628

    22.4

    -0.28%

  • NGG

    0.0400

    65.61

    +0.06%

  • AZN

    -0.2900

    73.5

    -0.39%

  • BTI

    0.8600

    41.37

    +2.08%

  • CMSD

    0.1000

    22.81

    +0.44%

  • RIO

    -0.9500

    60.08

    -1.58%

  • GSK

    0.0000

    38.74

    0%

  • SCS

    -0.1400

    10.96

    -1.28%

  • RELX

    0.2500

    50.41

    +0.5%

  • VOD

    -0.0800

    9.37

    -0.85%

  • BCC

    -0.2100

    98.09

    -0.21%

  • BP

    -0.0700

    33.79

    -0.21%

  • BCE

    -0.0100

    22.96

    -0.04%

  • JRI

    0.0700

    12.94

    +0.54%

Myanmar quake: what we know
Myanmar quake: what we know / Photo: Valentina BRESCHI, Cléa PÉCULIER - AFP

Myanmar quake: what we know

A powerful earthquake centred in Myanmar has killed more than 150 people in the war-torn country and neighbouring Thailand and caused widespread damage.

Text size:

Here is what we know:

- Powerful, and shallow -

The 7.7-magnitude quake hit northwest of Myanmar's Sagaing at 12:50 pm (0650 GMT) on Friday at a shallow depth of 10 kilometres (six miles).

It was followed minutes later by a powerful 6.7-magnitude aftershock and a dozen smaller tremors.

The quake was felt across the region, with shaking reported from India to the west and China to the east, as well as Cambodia and Laos.

The quake hit along the Sagaing Fault that runs from the coast to Myanmar's northern border, according to earthquake scientists Judith Hubbard and Kyle Bradley.

It "has long been considered one of the most dangerous strike-slip faults on Earth" because of its proximity to major cities Yangon and Mandalay, as well as capital Naypyidaw, they wrote in an analysis.

The fault is comparatively simple and straight, which geologists believe can lead to especially large quakes, they added.

- Over 150 killed -

At least 144 people have been confirmed dead in the quake in Myanmar, according to the country's junta chief.

However, Min Aung Hlaing warned the toll was likely to rise given the widespread destruction across the country.

Myanmar's four years of civil war, sparked by the military seizing power, have also weakened the country's emergency and health services, leaving them ill-equipped to respond to such a disaster.

In Thailand, 10 people were killed in Bangkok, most in the collapse of an under-construction skyscraper.

But up to 100 more construction workers were believed trapped in the rubble of the building, near the sprawling Chatuchak market.

Rescue operations continued throughout the night, though it was proving complicated to pick through the unstable rubble.

- Widespread damage -

The quake caused extensive damage in Myanmar.

There was massive destruction in Mandalay, where multiple buildings collapsed into piles of rubble and twisted metal coated in dust, dotted with people attempting rescues.

The Ava bridge running across the Irawaddy river from Sagaing, built nearly 100 years ago, collapsed into the swirling waters below.

There were reports of damage to Mandalay airport, potentially complicating relief efforts, as well as to the city's university and palace, according to the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.

In Naypyidaw, AFP reporters saw buildings toppled and roads ruptured.

At a hospital in the capital, patients were being treated outdoors after the quake damaged the building, bringing down the emergency department's entrance.

Electricity outages were reported in several places, with power limited to four hours in Yangon due to quake damage.

Communications across affected areas were also patchy, with phone networks largely down.

In Bangkok, a crane collapsed at a second building site and the city shut down metro and light rail services overnight to inspect for damage.

Several hundred people slept in parks overnight, city authorities said, either unable to get home or worried about the structural integrity of their buildings.

The quake prompted thousands of people to flee shaking buildings in Thailand, where quakes are rare.

Even hospitals were evacuated, with one woman delivering a baby in the street in Bangkok, and a surgeon continuing to operate on a patient after being forced to leave the theatre mid-operation.

- Aid pleas, offers -

The scale of the devastation prompted Myanmar's isolated military regime to make a rare plea for international assistance.

Myanmar's junta chief invited "any country, any organisation" to help with relief and said he he "opened all ways for foreign aid".

Offers of assistance flooded in, with neighbour India among the first to say it was ready to help.

The European Union offered support, and US President Donald Trump said Washington had "already spoken" with Myanmar about aid.

"It's a real bad one, and we will be helping," he told reporters.

The World Health Organization said it was preparing to surge support in response to "a very, very big threat to life and health."

burs-sah/pdw/fox

M.Sugiyama--JT