Search for quake survivors intensifies in Myanmar, Thailand; death toll exceeds 2,000

Rescuers freed four people, including a pregnant woman and a girl, from collapsed buildings in Mandalay, the city in central
Chinese rescue workers in red helmets carried one survivor, wrapped in a metallic thermal blanket, through heaps of shattered concrete and twisted metal at an apartment building in Mandalay, images carried by
Drone footage of the city showed a huge, multi-storey building pancaked into layers of concrete, but some gilded temples were still standing.
Civil war in
"Access to all victims is an issue ... given the conflict situation. There are a lot of security issues to access some areas across the front lines in particular," Arnaud de Baecque, resident representative of the
One rebel group said
In the Thai capital
Scanning machines and sniffer dogs were deployed at the site and
Realistic chances of survival diminish after 72 hours, she said, adding: "We have to speed up. We're not going to stop even after 72 hours."
In
Reuters could not immediately confirm the new death tolls. Media access has been restricted in the country since the junta took power. Junta chief General
RELIEF EFFORTS
"It doesn't matter how long we work. The most important thing is that we can bring hope to the local people," said Yue Xin, head of the China Search and Rescue Team that pulled people out of the rubble in Mandalay, Xinhua reported.
"Our teams in Mandalay are joining efforts to scale up the humanitarian response despite going through the trauma themselves," said
The quake devastation has piled more misery on
"The earthquake has laid bare the deeper vulnerabilities facing
Critical infrastructure - including bridges, highways, airports and railways - across the country of 55 million lie damaged, slowing humanitarian efforts while the conflict that has battered the economy, displaced over 3.5 million people and debilitated the health system, rages on.
"We see devastated communities across the country in Mandalay and (the capital) Naypyidaw in particular...People are still sleeping outside, can't access their homes, so they don't have capacity to cook their meals, said the ICRC's de Baecque.
"All the health structures that have been damaged... are not delivering what they were doing in terms of healthcare and have a difficulty to absorb extra needs."
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