Myanmar’s junta continues airstrikes, hampering search for quake survivors

Junta leader Min Aung Hlaing said the death toll is approaching 3,000.
RFA Burmese and Pimuk Rakkanam for RFA
2025.04.01
Bangkok
Myanmar’s junta continues airstrikes, hampering search for quake survivors The aftermath of a junta airstrike on Naung Lin Village, Nawnghkio, which was bombed on March 28, 2025.
Danu People’s Liberation Front

UPDATED at 9:30 a.m. ET on 2025-04-01

Junta airstrikes continued to hamper rescue workers and aid agencies trying to help the survivors of last week’s massive Myanmar earthquake.

Adding to the humanitarian crisis caused by a civil war, civilians displaced by Friday’s magnitude 7.7 quake that killed over 2,700 people are being forced to shelter from bombs as well.

“From the date of the earthquake, March 28, to yesterday, we’ve found that the military has launched aerial attacks eight times. Even today in the Magway area, we’ve seen them bombing again,” said Moe Htet Nay, an adviser at the Nyan Lin Thit Research Group, which monitors the conflict.

Junta forces have bombed Shan state’s Nawnghkio township three times, Kachin state’s Bhamo township twice, Phyu township in Bago region, Pauk township in Magway region and Demoso township in Kayah state once each, he said Tuesday.

Nine people were killed in the post-quake attacks, with seven injured nationwide, according to groups fighting the military government that seized power from elected civilians in a February 2021 coup.

On Tuesday, Junta leader Min Aung Hlaing said the earthquake death toll has risen to 2,719 and is likely to exceed 3,000. About 4,521 people were injured and 441 missing, he said on television.

Friday’s earthquake was centered near Mandalay in the middle of the country and caused severe destruction in Sagaing, Magway, Bago, Naypyidaw, Shan state and eastern Taungoo. It also rocked Thailand and other parts of the region.

The junta declared a state of emergency in all the affected regions. The opposition National Unity Government and Myanmar residents said the decree has hampered rescue efforts because of a 10 p.m. curfew in many areas where civilian teams are searching for survivors.


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Human Rights Watch on Tuesday called on the junta to “allow immediate unfettered access to humanitarian aid for earthquake survivors.”

It said Myanmar’s military rulers should lift restrictions including curfews, registration of rescue workers and internet blackouts that are slowing the emergency response.

“Myanmar’s military junta still invokes fear, even in the wake of a horrific natural disaster that killed and injured thousands,” said Bryony Lau, the group’s deputy Asia director.

“The junta needs to break from its appalling past practice and ensure that humanitarian aid quickly reaches those whose lives are at risk in earthquake-affected areas,” she said.

Citing a rescue worker in the Sagaing region, Human Rights Watch said the number of bodies for volunteers to cremate is piling up.

“Even if they cremate a body every three minutes, they would have to work around the clock,” the rescuer said, according to HRW.

“Myanmar’s junta cannot be trusted to respond to a disaster of this scale,” said Lau. “Concerned governments and international agencies need to press the junta to allow full and immediate access to survivors wherever they are.”

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Rescue workers survey the site of an under-construction building collapse in Bangkok, March 29, 2025. (Lillian Suwanrumpha/AFP)

Hopes fade in Bangkok

At the site where a Bangkok office tower was toppled by the quake, hopes were fading for the dozens of construction workers – many of them from Myanmar – buried in the rubble of the government building.

A scan of the site indicated more than 70 people still beneath the concrete and tangled steel wreckage of the state audit office near the famous Chatuchak market, Bangkok Deputy Gov. Tavida Kamolvej said Tuesday. The confirmed death toll from the office collapse is 13.

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An X-ray image shows bodies beneath the rubble of the collapsed government building in Bangkok. (Fire & Rescue Thailand Facebook)

Thai Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra has ordered an investigation into the building collapse, with some findings expected later this week. She also ordered eight government ministries to remedy their slow response to the quake’s aftermath.

Bangkok Gov. Chadchart Sittiput ordered inspections of all high-rise buildings in the capital to allay the concerns of greater Bangkok’s 17 million residents.

The governor on Monday rescinded the administration’s designation of the city as a disaster zone, which had enhanced the powers of the emergency services.

“The impact on the public, the damage to basic infrastructure, transportation routes, and assistance in various sectors have been continuously addressed,” he said in a statement.

“Additionally, the living conditions of most residents have returned to normal.”

Amid reports of mass cancellations of hotel bookings, Tourism Minister Sorawong Thienthong held an emergency meeting with industry representatives and the tourism council.

He said no visitors had been harmed, hotels had passed safety inspections and tourist police were monitoring key sites.

In China, the government has moved to silence concerns about its ability to police quality standards in overseas construction projects. The 32-story office tower in Bangkok was being constructed by the China Railway No. 10 Engineering Group, a subsidiary of a Chinese state-owned enterprise.

News spread rapidly on Chinese social media, where users began questioning the structural integrity of Chinese-led projects abroad.

But the discussion didn’t last long. Posts were deleted, search results filtered and even official news reports quietly removed.

One article titled “Under-construction audit building collapses in quake, Thai contractor faces liquidity crisis,” published by Chinese outlet Sina Finance, for instance, was removed from the platform’s website.

Chinese state-run outlets such as People’s Daily and CCTV both published reports on the collapse on the same day, but the links are no longer accessible.

The Chinese embassy in Thailand did not immediately respond to Radio Free Asia’s request for comments. Radio Free Asia is a news service affiliated with BenarNews.

Alan Lu contributed to this report from Taipei, Taiwan.

This story was updated to include information about the Chinese government efforts to silence reporting on the Bangkok building collapse.

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