BBC / Tessa WongThe final time Soe Ko Ko Naing noticed his great-uncle was in July, at his dwelling by the banks of the Irrawaddy River.
Ko Naing, a supporter of Myanmar’s resistance in opposition to the army junta, was about to flee the nation. Residing in Min Kun, a small city within the army stronghold space of Sagaing, Ko Naing didn’t belief anybody sufficient to inform them of his plan – besides his beloved Oo Oo (‘uncle’ in Burmese).
“I advised him I used to be going to Thailand. He thought it was a superb plan. He wished me good well being and security,” recalled Ko Naing, a 35-year-old labour rights activist.
Practically a yr on, Ko Naing is protected in Thailand. However his Oo Oo was killed by the highly effective earthquake that struck Sagaing close to Mandalay final Friday, claiming a minimum of 2,000 lives.
“I’ve sleepless nights. I am nonetheless struggling,” mentioned Ko Naing.
“I’ve no regret for leaving the nation, as a result of I needed to. However I really feel responsible as a result of our individuals want us probably the most now. I really feel helpless.”
Ko Naing is likely one of the thousands and thousands of Myanmar’s diaspora anxiously watching from afar as their nation struggles following its greatest earthquake in a century.
Like him, many are experiencing survivor’s guilt and a way of helplessness. For some, these emotions are compounded by the truth that they can not return simply to assist in rescue efforts or test on family members, as they’d face political persecution.
Thailand hosts the world’s greatest Myanmar diaspora neighborhood with about 4.3 million Myanmar nationals, although the determine is considered a lot greater if it contains undocumented migrants.
As a wealthier neighbour, it has lengthy attracted individuals from Myanmar who make up a big part of its migrant workforce. The 2021 army coup and subsequent civil struggle have solely swelled their ranks.
Some toil within the building sector – lots of the 400 employees at a Bangkok skyscraper that collapsed as a result of quake had been believed to be from Myanmar – whereas others work in Thailand’s agriculture and seafood industries.
On a drizzly Monday morning in Samut Sakhon, a fishing port close to Bangkok that’s dwelling to many employees from Myanmar, males sporting the normal Burmese longgyi and girls with thanaka daubed on their cheeks thronged the alleys of a road market.
Banners promoting SIM playing cards with low cost charges for calling Myanmar had been plastered throughout buildings, whereas retailers displayed indicators in each Thai and Burmese.
“Now we have seen movies on-line of buildings collapsing and folks trapped beneath the rubble. We really feel so unhappy about not having the ability to do something,” mentioned 30-year-old manufacturing unit employee Yin Yin, who like many within the crowd is nervous in regards to the scenario again dwelling.
Shopowner Thant Zin, 28, who’s from a city in Sagaing unaffected by the quake, mourned the collapse of centuries-old pagodas and temples in his space. “What a catastrophe! I really feel so dangerous… Now we have by no means skilled this extent of injury earlier than.”
BBC / Tessa WongThroughout city Ko Naing sat in his workplace, checking for updates on his household in Myanmar. No less than 150 of his family members dwell in or round Sagaing and Mandalay.
Friday’s earthquake was so immense that it could possibly be felt in Thailand, India and China. That day, as Ko Naing lay in mattress in Samut Sakhon a whole bunch of kilometres from the epicentre, he mentioned he felt the room shake for about 30 seconds.
He instantly went on social media and found the quake had occurred near Min Kun. Then he got here throughout an image of Sagaing’s Ava Bridge – an area landmark – mendacity in mangled ruins within the Irrawaddy River. “I used to be shocked and devastated, I’ve a variety of family members in that space. I assumed, ‘it should be faux information’. However it was actual.”
With sluggish communications in Myanmar within the quake’s speedy aftermath, Ko Naing solely heard from his family members on Saturday. Virtually everybody was protected and accounted for, he was advised, aside from a distant great-aunt who died in Mandalay – and his Oo Oo.
Per week earlier than, Min Kun and its environment had been shelled by the army concentrating on the Individuals’s Defence Forces resistance. Virtually all of Ko Naing’s household within the city fled to Sagaing metropolis or to a military-controlled space in Mandalay.
Oo Oo had refused to decamp and took shelter within the village monastery as a substitute, understanding that the army wouldn’t assault Buddhist websites.
However on Friday, the monastery collapsed fully when the earthquake struck. His physique was discovered within the rubble on Monday.
Ko Naing remembers Oo Oo as an open-minded and outspoken 60-year-old. In an space dominated by the army, the 2 bonded over their shared help for the resistance, particularly after the coup.
In the summertime the 2 would spend afternoons by the river, having lunch and catching up on the information. His great-uncle had no telephone and no social media, and Ko Naing would assist him test updates on the civil struggle. “I used to be his private information company,” he joked.
Oo Oo needed to retire from his job as a boatman when he suffered a stroke which left him partially paralysed. Nonetheless, each morning, he would shuffle to his household’s tea store and fry up ee kyar kwe, that are doughsticks.
“He was my supply of inspiration, particularly in tough instances… he was the one one I may speak to. I bought my resilience from him,” mentioned Ko Naing.
Getty PhotosThat resilience was one thing Ko Naing needed to faucet on when he made his harmful escape from Myanmar alongside along with his spouse and five-year-old son. He was needed by the army, which had issued a warrant for his arrest for participating in peaceable protests.
His household travelled to the border the place they crossed into Thailand illegally. As they ran at nighttime previous a Thai border police station, the household tripped over a big pipe and tumbled to the bottom. His son fell backwards on his head. Ko Naing feared the worst.
However to his aid, his son let loose a loud cry. Ko Naing slapped his hand over the kid’s mouth, picked him up, and sprinted towards a individuals smuggler ready for them with a motorbike. They first headed to the Thai city of Mae Sot earlier than ultimately travelling to Samut Sakhon, the place they secured the best to remain in Thailand.
Although he’s now protected and has a superb job, Ko Naing mentioned: “To be sincere I am very depressed in the intervening time.
“First there was the pandemic, then the coup, then the army has been killing individuals who oppose them. Individuals have been displaced.
“Then the earthquake has added to the struggling. Even after the earthquake, the army retains bombing areas.
“I maintain considering it could be good if we might be there, if we will do one thing… it is miserable dwelling right here, seeing the information about my nation.”
He’s working with the Myanmar diaspora to gather donations and ship humanitarian help to the quake victims again dwelling. They’re additionally serving to the Myanmar building employees affected by the Bangkok constructing collapse.
“If we all the time really feel depressed, no person will assist our individuals… it is good that we’re alive. We are able to nonetheless do one thing.
“Now we have to make up our thoughts on the best way to rebuild, how we will transfer on.”


















































