Yogita Limaye is the first foreign journalist to enter Myanmar since a huge earthquake hit the war-torn country.
Residents in Mandalay, Myanmar's second-largest city, speak of despair and sleepless nights since last week's earthquake.
Rescue workers at the U Hla Thein monastery said 270 monks were taking a religious exam when the quake hit, decimating the ...
22h
Agence France-Presse on MSNLike 'living in hell': Quake-hit Mandalay monastery clears away rubbleBare-handed monks slowly pick away the rubble that was once the wall of a historic Buddhist monastery in Mandalay, its ...
1d
Agence France-Presse on MSN'Can collapse anytime': Mandalay quake victims seek respite outdoorsAfter a night sprawled out on cardboard panels under hastily erected plastic tarps, hundreds of Mandalay residents awoke ...
Rescue teams from the SAR and the mainland have joined hands in finding a survivor in the quake-rattled Myanmar city of ...
Volunteers gathered to help, some coming in from other cities, to do whatever they could in the city near the epicenter of ...
A local in Mandalay tells Sky News that many of the buildings in the city are "collapsed or inclining", adding: "There are ...
The smell of decaying bodies permeated the streets of Myanmar's second-largest city on Sunday as people worked frantically by ...
The USGS says a 5.1 magnitude earthquake hit near Myanmar’s second-largest city on Sunday, the latest in a string of aftershocks following Friday’s devastating temblor ...
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