Myanmar quake death toll passes 1,600, as junta lets in foreign rescuers

Friday's 7.7 magnitude quake, among the biggest to jolt the Southeast Asian nation in the last century, crippled airports, bridges and highways amid a civil war that has wrecked the economy and displaced millions.
The death toll in
In neighbouring
Survivors in Mandalay,
In
The U.S. Geological Service's predictive modelling estimated
A day after making a rare call for international assistance,
"The Chairman of the
AIRPORTS CLOSED
An initial assessment by
"Due to significant damage, Naypyitaw and Mandalay international airports are temporarily closed," said the NUG, which includes remnants of the elected civilian government ousted by the military in a 2021 coup that triggered the civil war.
The control tower at the airport in Naypyitaw,
A
A Chinese rescue team arrived at the airport in
Chinese President Xi Jinping spoke by phone with the junta chief,
Relief supplies from
'NO HELP COMING'
Residents in the hardest-hit areas are desperate for the help.
The quake, which hit around lunchtime on Friday, affected wide swathes of
Rescue operations in Mandalay could not match the scale of the disaster, one resident said by phone, asking not to be named because of security concerns.
"Many people are trapped but there is no help coming just simply because there isn't manpower or equipment or vehicles," he said.
In
"We always have hope," he told reporters. "We're still working around the clock."
Chanpen Kaewnoi, 39, said she rushed over on Friday afternoon after seeing news reports that the under-construction building where her mother and younger sister were working had collapsed.
"I called my sister, but no matter how many times I tried to call her there was no connection," she said after a sleepless night at the site.
"I want to wait for my mother and sister," said Chanpen, herself a construction worker, "I want to see their faces again."
Across the sprawling metropolis, where such quakes are rare, there may be up to 5,000 damaged buildings, including residential towers, said Anek Siripanichgorn, a board member of
"We are going through hundreds of cases," he said. "If we see cases where there is potential danger, we will immediately send engineers."
(Reporting by
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