Yahoo – AFP, Hla-Hla Htay, August 24, 2016
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| The ancient Sulamuni temple is seen shrouded in dust after a 6.8 magnitude earthquake hit Bagan on August 24, 2016 (AFP Photo/Soe Moe Aung) |
Yangon
(AFP) - A powerful 6.8 magnitude earthquake struck central Myanmar Wednesday,
killing at least three people and damaging nearly 200 pagodas in the famous
ancient capital of Bagan, officials said.
The quake,
which the US Geological Survey said hit at a depth of 84 kilometres (52 miles),
was also felt across neighbouring Thailand, India and Bangladesh, sending
panicked residents rushing onto the streets.
Two girls,
aged 7 and 15, were killed in Magway region where the quake struck, according
to Myanmar's Ministry of Information.
A collapsed
building in a nearby town also killed a 22-year-old man and injured one woman,
local police told AFP.
Heavy
damage was also reported in Bagan -- Myanmar's most famous archaeological site
and a major tourist destination 30 kilometres north of the quake's epicentre.
Some 171 of
the city's more than 2,500 Buddhist monuments were damaged by the tremors,
according to a statement posted by the Ministry of Religious and Cultural
Affairs on Facebook.
"Some
were seriously damaged," Aung Kyaw, the local director of Bagan's culture
department, told AFP.
![]() |
Famous
temples in the ancient Myanmar city of Bagan
\were damaged as a 6.8 magnitude
quake struck, police say
(AFP Photo/Jonathan Jacobsen)
|
Photos
showed clouds of dust billowing around some of the site's larger temples, with
bricks crumbling down their tiered facades.
A police
officer from Bagan said a Spanish holidaymaker was slightly hurt when the quake
knocked her from the temple where she was watching the sunset.
Scaling
Bagan's ancient structures to watch the sun set over the vast plain of pagodas
is a daily ritual among tourists and local pilgrims.
The
temples, built between the 10th and 14th centuries, are revered in the
Buddhist-majority country and a top draw for its growing tourism industry.
Myanmar, which
has opened its doors to a rising tide of visitors since emerging from junta
rule in 2011, is eager to see the ancient capital designated a UNESCO world
heritage site.
'Still
scared'
Soe Win, a
local politician from Chauk -- the riverside town closest to the epicentre --
said the tremors were the worst he had experienced in years.
"More
than eight pagodas in town collapsed," the 50-year-old told AFP, referring
to Chauk. "Two buildings collapsed as well, while some others were
cracked. People in town are still scared."
Damage was
also reported in the capital Naypyidaw some 200 kilometres away, with MP Thiri
Yadanar posting photos on Facebook of cracked glass windows inside a parliament
building.
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Collapsed
walls surround an ancient pagoda after the quake in Bagan on
August 24, 2016
(AFP Photo/Soe Moe Aung)
|
The earthquake caused high-rise buildings in Myanmar's largest city Yangon to sway, as well as those in the Thai capital Bangkok and the Indian city of Kolkata.
"Services
of the underground railway have been suspended fearing aftershocks of the
quake," Kolkata Metro Railway spokesman Indrani Banerjee told AFP.
The quake
was also felt throughout south and southwestern Bangladesh close to the border
with Myanmar, with residents running outside.
At least 20
people were injured as workers tried to flee a building in the Savar industrial
district outside Dhaka, ATN Bangla television reported.
"All
of us ran to the streets leaving the houses and shops unsecured as the quake
seemed very dangerous," Nazmus Sakib, from the southern city of Chittagong
near the Myanmar border, wrote on his Facebook wall.
Earthquakes
are relatively common in Myanmar, although the country has not suffered a major
one since 2012.
That
powerful tremor -- also of 6.8 magnitude -- struck the centre of the country,
killing 26 people and injuring hundreds.



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