
Powerful earthquake hit Myanmar, trap plenty pipo for Thailand
Just 12 minutes afta di first earthquake hit Myanmar, another one strike, according to US Geological Survey.
Di second one get a magnitude of 6.4, e record, less than di earlier one of 7.7.
Di epicentre dey 18km (11.1 miles) south of Sagaing.
Forty-three construction workers dey miss afta powerful earthquake cause one unfinished 30-storey building for Bangkok to collapse, Thai authorities tok.
Fifty pipo bin dey inside di building near Chatuchak Park, wey dey hundreds of miles away from di earthquake epicentre for Myanmar.
Seven bin escape while 43 odas still dey trapped, di National Institute for Emergency Medicine tok for Facebook post.
AFP news agency also bin report di 43 pipo wey dey miss, dem quote police.
"When I arrived to inspect di site, I hear pipo dey call for help, dem say help me," Worapat Sukthai, deputy police chief of Bang Sue district, tell AFP.
Di building dem plan am for goment offices.
'I panic well-well', Bangkok resident tok
Bui Thu, one BBC journalist wey dey live for Bangkok, tell BBC World Service Newsday programme say she bin dey her house dey cook wen di first quake happun.
"I bin dey very nervous, I panic well-well," she tok. "I bin no know know wetin e be becos e don reach, I think a decade since Bangkok experience really strong or powerful earthquake like dis."
"From my apartment I just see some cracking for di walls and water splashed out of swimming pools and pipo just dey just shout."
Sake of aftershock, she, along wit oda pipo, run out enta street.
"We just dey try to wrap our heads around wetin dey going on," she tok.
"Buildings for Bangkok no dey designed for earthquakes, so I feel say na why I think di damage go big."
Wetin we know so far
Di earthquake
Di damage
Goment response
Roads crack and building scata for Myanmar
Checkout some images now from Naypyidaw, di capital of Myanmar.
Why updates from Myanmar dey difficult to get
Na military junta dey rule Myanmar since di coup wey happun for 2021, sake of dis, access to information dey difficult. Di state dey controls almost all of local radio, television, print and online media.
Internet use also dey restricted.
Also e be like say Communication lines dey down as BBC no fit get through to aid agencies wey dey ground.
How common earthquakes be for Myanmar?
Earthquakes dey more common for Myanmar, compared to Thailand.
Between 1930 and 1956, na about six strong quakes of 7.0 magnitude near di Sagaing Fault don happun, wey run dey through di centre of di kontri , AFP news agency reports, dem cite USGS.
Thailand no be earthquake zone and nearly all earthquakes wey dem don feel dia, wey dey rare, na from neighbouring Myanmar.
As buildings for Bangkok no dey engineered for powerful earthquakes, di structural damage fit dey significant.
'I feel di earthquake for a long time,' Yangon resident tok
Soe Lwin, for Yangon, Myanmar largest city, say im bin feel di earthquake for a "long time".
But, im say e no dey like say widespread damage dey for di downtown area of di former capital.
Im add say residents dey worried about di potential for another, bigger earthquake in di coming days.
State of emergency declared in six regions of Myanmar
Di military junta wey dey rule Myanmar since one coup for 2021 don declare a state of emergency for di regions of Sagaing, Mandalay, Magway, Bago, Easter Shan state and Naypyidaw, according to local media reports.
For one statement wey we don see dem add say officials go investigate di damages and begin coordinating rescues for affected areas.
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Street kidnappings 15 15 15 Shadi Haroun was one of the first organising protests back in 2011, along with his brother Hadi. After dodging shots from snipers on rooftops, he was bundled into a car and taken to what looked like an ordinary house in the suburbs of Damascus. But this was no home. It was an interrogation centre - and Shadi was to get his first taste of the Assad regime's determination to stamp him out. 'The soldier told me to open my mouth,' Shadi recalled. 'He put his gun inside, and said: 'You're going to get tortured to death. So why don't I make it easier and put you to rest?'' Soon after he was transferred to Mezzeh Air Force Intelligence base, one of the regime's most notorious detention sites. Like all those who opposed Assad, Shadi was deemed a terrorist - with torture their chosen method of extracting a confession. 'He called the investigator and said to him, 'This man, flay him and break his bones. Kill him, do whatever you want, but I need his confession on my desk',' said Shadi. 'He told me to lie down. They handcuffed my hands behind my back, and then cuffed my feet and joined my hands and feet together. 'They wrapped me in a blanket, like being inside a pipe. I was sweating and the smell of blood was very strong. I stayed wrapped like that for about a week." Eventually Shadi was released. Undeterred, he began organising protests again, more determined than ever to bring down the regime. Carpet of bodies 15 15 15 Within nine months of the protests, thousands had been arrested, many bundled off the streets like Shadi and taken to secretive locations where they were tortured until they 'confessed'. At least 3,000 had already been killed. Syria's security forces had a network of spies and informants across the country that tracked people like Shadi's every move. 'You could find informants wherever you go,' said Sergeant Omar, an officer in the Air Force Intelligence. 'They could be a taxi driver, they could be a plumber, a mobile phone shop owner, a guy selling cigarettes. 'People were living in fear. This is why we'd say, 'the walls have ears'.' It wasn't long before soldiers pulled up to the house Shadi and his brother were hiding in. Arrested once again, they were taken to the notorious Air Force Intelligence branch in Harasta, on the outskirts of Damascus. Colonel Zain was second in command at the time. 'The place I worked in was very famous for its bloody practices and the number of detainees held there,' he said. 'We would pack 400 detainees in a room that was eight by ten metres. Those who entered would walk over the bodies of the detainees - you couldn't see the floor.' Shadi returned to Harasta with the documentary crew and showed them round the bare walls that once imprisoned him. 'The temperature was around 40 degrees, because it was so crowded,' said Shadi. 'We saw strange cases of disease amongst prisoners, I think due to oxygen deficiency because of overcrowding. These psychotic episodes soon turned into physical symptoms.' 'Torture parties' 15 15 Inside is a changing room, where inmates were stripped, and solitary confinement cells where prisoners would spend months, or even years, locked up. In a neighbouring room, Shadi is reminded of when he was chained up with his brother before being interrogated from pipes on the ceiling. 'We were taken there and hung by our handcuffs from the pipes,' he said. 'It was unbearable - for almost 72 hours, three days, in the same position, without food or drink.' Colonel Zain recalled: 'The interrogation room was right underneath my office. 'Everyone heard the screams. Everyone knew how the interrogations were conducted.' Four months into their detention, a truck pulled up that was normally used to transport meat and they were moved to Saydnaya, a prison with a reputation for brutality that preceded anywhere else in the country. Brainwashed guards treated prisoners like animals, subjecting detainees to continuous beatings. 'We were tortured for hours, and stopped keeping track of time,' recalled Hadi. 'If someone cried during a beating, the beating would get worse." Torture them, don't let them sleep at night. Throw them a party… put them in a grave if you want to, bury them alive Intelligence officer Putting his arms up against a door, Shadi said: "They'd bring a cable and suspend us like this. This is the 'Ghost Method'. "They'd pull us up and we'd be on our toes - you'd last 30 minutes then you'd pass out." Up to 13,000 prisoners were executed here alone in the first four years of the civil war, according to Amnesty. 'I beat them with all my strength,' said Hussam, a military policeman. 'Our superiors would say, 'Torture them, don't let them sleep at night. Throw them a party… put them in a grave if you want to, bury them alive'. 'When they'd call me to go and torture them, the prisoners would go back to their cells bloody and exhausted.' 'Execution parties' 15 15 Occasionally a prisoner would be dragged out of their cell, finally receiving a respite from the torture. But they were on their way to a secret trial - and death was the usual sentence. 'On Wednesday mornings, we'd have an 'execution party'," Hussam recalled. 'Our role during executions was to place the rope on the prisoner - only an officer could push the chair. 'One time, the chair was pushed, but after 22 minutes he didn't die. So I grabbed him and pulled him downwards, so another guard who was bigger and stronger said, 'Go I will do it.' 'Before he died he said one thing: 'I'm going to tell God what you did'.' The bodies of the dead - be it from execution, torture, or disease - were then taken to military hospitals where their deaths were registered. 'Most of the bodies suffered acute weight loss, resembling a skeleton,' said Kamal, an army nurse. 'Most of them suffered from skin lesions and rashes due to lack of hygiene - and most of them had torture marks." He added: 'It was forbidden to record the cause of death as torture. Even those killed from gunshots were recorded as heart and respiratory failure.' With the bodies piling up, mass graves were the only solution. At least 130 grave sites have been found across Syria so far - but dozens more are believed to be out there, known only to those who dug them out. There is little hope of identification for the thousands dumped there. Many of the guards and officers defected from Assad's regime, joining the rebels or fleeing the country. By 2019, the rebellion had largely been suppressed. Shadi and his brother were released at last, fleeing to exile in Turkey. Then, in December this year, rebel forces overwhelmed Damascus and Assad fled the country and claimed asylum in Russia. With the collapse of the regime, Shadi set to work helping others locate their missing friends and family. But for many there is little hope of ever finding out what really happened to them. 'Everyone, the detainees, and families of the missing, should keep talking about this,' he said. 'All the decision makers who had a role in oppressing the Syrian people escaped, and are now in hiding. 'They've left everybody to pick up the pieces - to deal with what they left behind.' Surviving Syria's Prisons airs tonight on BBC Two at 9pm. 15