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Myanmar military limiting aid in earthquake areas, UN says
REUTERS
Published :
Apr 04, 2025 19:30
Updated :
Apr 04, 2025 19:32

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A damaged building is pictured following a strong earthquake in Amarapura township, Myanmar, April 4, 2025. Photo : REUTERS/Stringer/Files

Myanmarโ€™s military is limiting critically needed humanitarian aid for earthquake victims in areas where it sees opposition to its rule, the United Nations human rights office said on Friday.

The U.N. Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights also said it was investigating 53 reported attacks by the junta against its opponents since the earthquake struck on March 28, including air strikes, of which 16 came after a ceasefire on April 2.

On Friday, the office was made aware of a further eight attacks which it was looking into, it said.

A spokesperson for Myanmarโ€™s ruling junta did not respond to calls from Reuters seeking comment.

The humanitarian situation in earthquake areas, especially those out of the militaryโ€™s control, was catastrophic, U.N. rights office spokesperson Ravina Shamdasani told reporters in Geneva.

The 7.7 magnitude quake, one of the strongest to hit Myanmar in a century, jolted areas home to 28 million people, toppling buildings, flattening communities and leaving many without food, water and shelter. Myanmarโ€™s junta says the death toll has risen to more than 3,100.

โ€œLimitations of aid is part of a strategy to prevent aid getting to the populations it sees as not supporting its seizure of power back in 2021,โ€ said James Rodehaver, head of OHCHRโ€™s Myanmar team, speaking via video link from Bangkok.

The need for aid was particularly urgent in Myanmarโ€™s Sagaing region, and time was working against humanitarian agencies to help those in need, he added.

โ€œAir strikes are alarming, shocking and need to stop straight away - the focus needs to be on humanitarian recovery,โ€ Shamdasani said.

The government on state-run MRTV late on Wednesday announced a 20-day unilateral ceasefire effective immediately to support post-quake rehabilitation, but warned it would โ€œrespond accordinglyโ€ if rebels launched attacks.

Millions of people have been affected by Myanmarโ€™s widening civil war, triggered by the coup that ousted the government of Nobel peace laureate Aung San Suu Kyi.

It has decimated the mainly agrarian economy, driven more than 3.5 million people from their homes and crippled essential services such as healthcare.​
 

UN calls for Myanmar support as quake death toll reaches 3,354
REUTERS
Published :
Apr 05, 2025 21:41
Updated :
Apr 05, 2025 21:41

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Rubble lies near a damaged building following a strong earthquake in Pyawbwe township, Mandalay, Myanmar, April 4, 2025. Photo : REUTERS/Stringer

The United Nations called for the world to rally behind quake-hit Myanmar on Saturday as the death toll rose to 3,354, while a former USAID official said a U.S. aid team had received notice they were losing their jobs after arriving in the disaster zone.

In addition to those killed by the March 28 earthquake, 4,850 people were injured and another 220 are missing, state media said.

During a visit to Myanmarโ€™s second-biggest city, Mandalay, which was near the epicentre of the 7.7 magnitude quake, United Nations aid chief Tom Fletcher appealed for international support.

โ€œThe destruction is staggering. Lives lost. Homes destroyed. Livelihoods shattered. But the resilience is incredible,โ€ he said in a post on X. โ€œThe world must rally behind the people of Myanmar.โ€

Myanmarโ€™s neighbours, such as China, India and Southeast Asian nations, are among those that dispatched relief supplies and rescuers to aid the recovery effort in quake-hit areas that are home to about 28 million people over the past week.

The United States, which was until recently the worldโ€™s top humanitarian donor, had pledged at least $9 million to Myanmar to support earthquake-affected communities, but current and former U.S. officials say the dismantling of its foreign aid program has affected its response.

Three U.S. Agency for International Development workers who had travelled to Myanmar after the quake were told they were being let go, Marcia Wong, a former senior USAID official, told Reuters.

โ€œThis team is working incredibly hard, focussed on getting humanitarian aid to those in need. To get news of your imminent termination - how can that not be demoralising?โ€ said Wong.

The U.N. Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights said on Friday the junta was restricting aid supplies to quake-hit areas where communities did not back its rule. The U.N. office also said it was investigating 53 reported attacks by the junta against opponents, including air strikes, of which 16 were after the ceasefire was declared on Wednesday.

A junta spokesman did not respond to calls seeking comment.

Free Burma Rangers, a relief group, told Reuters on Saturday that the military had dropped bombs in Karenni and southern Shan states on Thursday and Friday despite the ceasefire announcement, killing at least five people.

The victims included civilians, according to the groupโ€™s founder, David Eubank, who said there had been at least seven such military attacks since the ceasefire.

ELECTION PLANS

The leader of the military government, Senior General Min Aung Hlaing, reaffirmed to Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi the juntaโ€™s plans to hold โ€œfree and fairโ€ elections in December when the two met in Bangkok, Myanmar state media said on Saturday.

Min Aung Hlaing made the rare trip to attend a summit of South and Southeast Asian nations on Friday, where he also met separately with the leaders of Thailand, Nepal, Bhutan and Sri Lanka.

Modi called for the post-quake ceasefire in Myanmarโ€™s civil war to be made permanent, and said the elections needed to be โ€œinclusive and credibleโ€, an Indian foreign affairs spokesperson said on Friday.

Critics have derided the planned election as a sham to keep the generals in power through proxies.

Since overthrowing the government of Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi in 2021, the military has struggled to run Myanmar, leaving the economy and basic services, including healthcare, in tatters, a situation exacerbated by the earthquake.

The civil war that followed the coup has displaced more than 3 million people, with widespread food insecurity and more than a third of the population in need of humanitarian assistance, the U.N. says.​
 

Death toll rises to 3,689 in Myanmar earthquake
Xinhua
Published :
Apr 12, 2025 10:49
Updated :
Apr 12, 2025 10:49

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The powerful earthquake that struck Myanmar has claimed 3,689 lives and left 5,020 people injured, with 139 others remaining unaccounted for as of Friday, according to the country's State Administration Council Information Team.​
 

Bangladesh completes rescue operations in Myanmar
Bangladesh Sangbad Sangstha . Dhaka 14 April, 2025, 16:49

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Bangladeshi team, comprising of Army rescue personnel, doctors, nurses and fire-service personnel, pose for a photo after completing rescue operations in Myanmar on Sunday. | BSS photo

Bangladesh has completed humanitarian activities and rescue operations in the aftermath of the devastating earthquake that struck Myanmar on March 28.

After completing the operations, the Bangladeshi team, comprising of Army rescue personnel, doctors, nurses and fire-service personnel, has left Myanmar on Sunday by Bangladesh Navy Ship BNS Somudra Avijan and they are scheduled to arrive in Chattogram on Tuesday, said a foreign ministryโ€™s press release in Dhaka.

In addition to the rescue operations, Bangladesh delivered 151.5 tonnes of humanitarian assistance to Myanmar, including food, medicine, tents, drinking water, blankets, clothing, hygiene products, and other essential items after receiving request from the government of Myanmar.

โ€˜As a responsible neighbour and a champion in disaster management, Bangladesh stood beside the earthquake-affected people of Myanmar and responded immediately with humanitarian assistance,โ€™ said the foreign ministry.

Chief adviser Professor Muhammad Yunus sent a letter of condolence to his counterpart of Myanmar government and offered humanitarian assistance.

The chief adviserโ€™s office, foreign affairs ministry, Armed Forces Division, disaster management and relief ministry and Bangladesh embassy in Myanmar coordinated relevant humanitarian activities.

From March 30 to April 12, in three phases, five Bangladeshi aircrafts and one navy ship carried 151.5 tonnes of assistance, including food, medicine, tents, food packets, dry ration, drinking water, blankets, clothing, hygiene products and other essentials to Myanmar.

In the first phase, two Bangladeshi aircraft (C-130J and CASA C-295) carried 16.5 tonnes of assistance to Yangon on March 30.

Another three Bangladeshi aircrafts (two C-130J and one CASA C295) carried 15 tonnes of relief and a 55-member rescue and medical team to Nay Pyi Taw in the second phase on 1st April.

The third phase of humanitarian assistance was conducted by the Bangladesh Navy Ship BNS Somudra Avijan, which sailed from Chittagong on April 8 carrying more than 120 metric tons of relief items and landed in Yangon on April 11.

Bangladesh ambassador in Myanmar handed over the assistance to Myanmarโ€™s authorities in three phases.

Bangladesh embassy in Myanmar also engaged the expatriate Bangladeshi community members in Myanmar in humanitarian activities in Mandalay city, said the release.​
 

Downpours drench homeless survivors of Myanmar quake
Agence France-Presse . Yangon 16 April, 2025, 21:37

Heavy rains have lashed the Myanmar region stricken by last monthโ€™s earthquake, aid officials said Wednesday, drenching homeless survivors and bogging down relief efforts.

Some 60,000 people are living in tent encampments in central Myanmar, according to the UN, three weeks after a 7.7-magnitude tremor damaged and destroyed thousands of homes and killed at least 3,700 people.

Downpours around 7:00pm on Tuesday flooded streets and camps in and around Mandalay, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies said.

The city โ€” Myanmarโ€™s second most populous โ€” suffered heavy damage in the March 28 disaster with apartment blocks collapsed, religious institutes demolished and hotels razed by the shallow quake.

AFP journalists in Mandalay over the weekend saw hundreds of people living under plastic gazebos and draped tarpaulins, perched on cardboard in makeshift homes that offered little protection from the elements.

โ€˜When these downpours happen the conditions just get really worse,โ€™ IFRC Myanmar delegation chief Nadia Khoury said.

Myanmar is in the midst of its โ€˜Thingyanโ€™ festival which typically celebrates the new year with water-splashing rituals symbolising cleansing and renewal.

But celebrations have been muted as the nation mourns, while relief workers and homeless families are fretting over the summerโ€™s oncoming monsoon season.

โ€˜The conditions are challenging. We are worried about the rains arriving,โ€™ said Khoury, who has visited the worst affected sites โ€” where the IFRC is working with the Myanmar Red Cross โ€” for the past two days.

โ€˜This effort needs to be as fast as possible, to get people into some form of permanent shelter, with good sanitary facilities and drinking water.โ€™

Myanmarโ€™s central belt is blanketed by at least two and a half million tonnes of debris, according to the UN, which says two million people have been pushed into โ€˜critical need of assistance and protectionโ€™.

Many homes remain standing but have suffered cracks, with families too fearful to return as the region is still rattled by regular aftershocks.

Daytime temperatures have soared as high as 44 degrees Celsius, piling more misery on survivors in the country which is also beset by a brutal civil war following a 2021 coup.​
 

Earthquake epicentre: Toll rises to 5 in Narsingdi
Correspondent Narsingdi
Published: 21 Nov 2025, 23: 02

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Two people died when the roof collapses during the earthquake at this house in Gabtoli area of Chinishpur Union in Narsingdi Sadar on 21 November 2025. Collected

The death toll from Friday morningโ€™s earthquake in Narsingdi Sadar, Palash and Shibpur upazilas has risen to five. Among them, a father and son died after a roof collapse in Sadar upazila.

The deceased were identified as Md Delwar Hossain, 37, and his son Md Omar Faruk, 9, of Gabtoli area under Chinishpur Union; Nasir Uddin, 65, of Nayapara in Kazirchar village under Danga Union of Palash; Kazam Ali Bhuiyan, 75, of Malita village under Charsindur Union; and Forkan Mia, 35, of Ajkitola village under Joynagar Union of Shibpur.

Delwar and his son Omar sustained injuries when the roof of their single-storey house collapsed. Both succumbed to their injuries. Nasir Uddin suffered a heart attack during the tremor, while Kazam Ali died after a mud wall collapsed on him.

Confirming the deaths of the father and son, Delwarโ€™s brother Zakir Hossain said, โ€œMy brother Delwar died around 5:30 pm at Dhaka Medical College Hospital. Earlier, Omar Faruk died on the way to Dhaka.โ€

1763774011200.webp

Kazam Ali Bhuiyan, an elderly man, was killed after a mud-wall collapsed on him during the earthquake in Malita village of Charsindur Union under Palash upazila on 21 November 2025..Collected

Police and locals said that construction materials from the roof of a nearby multi-storey building shook loose during the quake and crashed onto their house, causing part of the roof to collapse.

At that moment, Delwar, his daughter Tasfia, and son Omar were trying to run out of the house. Debris hit them on the head, leaving them seriously injured. Locals rescued them and rushed them to Narsingdi Sadar Hospital, from where Delwar and Omar were referred to Dhaka Medical College Hospital.

Narsingdiโ€™s Additional Superintendent of Police (Sadar Circle) Anwar Hossain said they had confirmed the child Omarโ€™s death, but were still collecting updates on Delwarโ€™s condition.

In Kazirchar area of Palash upazila, Nasir Uddin, 65, died of a suspected heart attack during the earthquake.

1763774061669.webp

A muddy road in Narsingdi caved in after the earthquake on 21 November 2025.. Collected

Locals and family members said Nasir was sitting with his relatives when the tremor struck. As the shaking intensified, he felt unwell and collapsed moments later. He was taken to Kaliganj Upazila Health Complex in Gazipur, where physicians declared him dead.

Nasir's son Ainal Mia told Prothom Alo, โ€œPhysicians believe my father died of a heart attack. We have brought the body home. Preparations for the funeral are underway.โ€

In Malita village of Charsindur Union, Kazam Ali Bhuiyan, 75, died when a mud wall of his house collapsed on him. At the time of the incident, he was inside the house with two grandchildren.

Family members said the two grandchildren rushed out of the house in panic as the tremor intensified, but Kazam Ali could not escape in time. A wall collapsed on him. He was rescued and taken first to Palash Upazila Health Complex, and later referred to Narsingdi Sadar Hospital. He died on the way.

Kazam Aliโ€™s cousin Auwal Mia said the funeral would be held after Maghrib prayers at the mosque ground near his home, and preparations for burial at the family graveyard are underway.

1763774106999.webp

Injured victims receive treatment at the emergency department of Dhaka Medical College Hospital on 21 November 2025..Dipu Malakar

Palash police station sub-inspector Rezaul Karim told Prothom Alo that an elderly man died after a mud wall collapsed during the earthquake. He added that they had also learned of another person who died due to illness.

In Ajkitola village of Joynagar Union under Shibpur upazila, Forkan Mia, 35, died after falling from a tree during the earthquake. He passed away in the evening while undergoing treatment at Narsingdi Sadar Hospital.

Confirming his death, Shibpur police station officer-in-charge (OC) Afzal Hossain said Forkan Mia was on a tree when the quake struck. The intense shaking caused him to fall. Family members rushed him to the hospital, where he died in the emergency department in the evening.

The tremor was first felt at 10:38 am on Friday. Parts of the country shook during the quake. The epicentre was in Madhabdi of Narsingdi.

According to the Bangladesh Meteorological Department, the magnitude was 5.7. However, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) reported the magnitude as 5.5 on the Richter scale.​
 

Earthquake of magnitude 6 could cause widespread collapse in Dhaka
Staff Correspondent Dhaka
Published: 21 Nov 2025, 16: 18

1763774262109.webp

Mehedi Ahmed Ansary Prothom Alo

An earthquake shook the entire Bangladesh; Friday morningโ€™s tremor is believed to be the strongest ever felt to date. Experts had long warned about the possibility of such an earthquake.

Professor Mehedi Ahmed Ansary of the Civil Engineering Department at Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology (BUET) believes that this quake is a wake-up call for Bangladesh.

The earthquake struck at 10:38 am today. According to the Bangladesh Meteorological Department, its magnitude on the Richter scale was 5.7. The United States Geological Survey (USGS) recorded it as 5.5. The epicentre was in Madhabdi of Narsingdi at a 10km depth.

Speaking to Prothom Alo, Mehedi Ahmed Ansary said that such earthquakes are expected in Bangladesh, and if an earthquake of magnitude 6 strikes, there is a risk that everything could collapse.

The World Bank has provided RAJUK with US $180 million to use in earthquake preparedness and various other sectors, but RAJUK does not have the capacity to utilise it, he added.

Among the major earthquakes in Bangladesh or this region is the devastating quake of 1762. Its magnitude on the Richter scale was 8.5. It is known as the โ€˜Great Arakan Earthquake,โ€™ affecting many areas of Bangladesh including Chattogram, Feni, and Cumilla. Later, the earthquake in Assam in 1897 measured 8.7.

In 1918, a 7.6-magnitude earthquake struck the Balisira valley of Sylhet, and in 1930, Dhubri in Assam experienced a 7.1-magnitude quake.

Mehedi Ahmed Ansary said that major earthquakes tend to recur every 150 years. From that perspective, the time for 7-magnitude earthquakes to return has already come. Therefore, after todayโ€™s quake, everyone must remain aware and cautious.

Dhaka city has a total of 2.1 million (21 lakh) buildings. Among them, 600,000 buildings are over six stories tall. The rest are under six stories. He expressed concern that these 600,000 tall buildings would be at the greatest risk in the event of a major earthquake.

Mentioning todayโ€™s tremor a warning sign for Bangladesh, professor Ansary said that after the Rana Plaza collapse, garment factory buildings in the country were inspected and categorised as good or bad. Similarly, buildings in the capital now need to be inspected, because many people do not follow building codes during construction.

The World Bank has provided RAJUK with US $180 million to use in earthquake preparedness and various other sectors, but RAJUK does not have the capacity to utilise it, he added.​
 

2 earthquakes in Dhaka this evening, epicentres in Badda
Staff Correspondent Dhaka
Updated: 22 Nov 2025, 19: 58

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Two earthquakes were felt in the capital Saturday evening. According to the Bangladesh Meteorological Department, the epicentres of both quakes were in the Badda area of Dhaka.

Tariful Newaz Kabir, a meteorologist at the Meteorological Department, told Prothom Alo that two back-to-back earthquakes occurred in the capital this evening. The first quake struck at 6:06:04pm with a magnitude of 3.7 on the Richter scale. One second later, at 6:06:05pm, the second quake occurred, measuring 4.3 on the Richter scale. Both had their epicentres in the Badda area of Dhaka.

Earlier today, another mild earthquake was felt in Narsingdi in the morning. It occurred in Palash upazila at 10:36:12 AM, with a magnitude of 3.3 on the Richter scale.

Yesterday, Friday at 10:38am, an earthquake shook the capital and surrounding areas. Fridayโ€™s quake was felt across the entire country. Many people rushed outside in panic. Ten people, including children, were killed and more than six hundred were injured. The highest number of deathsโ€”fiveโ€”occurred in Narsingdi. Four people died in Dhaka and one in Narayanganj. Many people jumped from buildings out of fear during the quake. Some buildings also tilted or developed cracks.​
 

Frequent Earthquakes: Can Dhaka prepare itself for the big one?
UNB Dhaka
Published: 23 Nov 2025, 22: 55

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Dhaka City File Photo

Central Bangladesh, including capital Dhaka, the most densely populated megacity (population above 10 million) in the world has been shaken by a series of earthquakes over just two days, raising serious concerns about the cityโ€™s preparedness for a major tremor.

Experts have warned that the overpopulated capital of Bangladesh could become a hotspot for earthquake vulnerability, as nearly 90 per cent of its older buildings were constructed without adhering to proper building codes.

Concerns intensified following the powerful, 5.7-magnitude earthquake that struck at 10:38am on Friday, shattering the usual weekend calm and turning the holiday into a frightening experience for residents of the capital.

According to the Bangladesh Meteorological Department (BMD), the epicenter of the 26-second quake was in Madhabdi, Narsingdi, and its depth was recorded at just 10 kilometres below the surface.

The tremor, felt across several parts of Bangladesh, left at least 10 people dead - four in Dhaka, five in Narsingdi and one in Narayanganj. Over 600 people were also injured.

It is rare for earthquakes in Bangladesh to result in multiple fatalities. The last time it happened was in 1999, when an intense earthquake shook the island of Moheskhali, killing 6 people. Hundreds were also injured on the island off the coast of Chattogram in the countryโ€™s south-east.

But Fridayโ€™s quake was instantly recognisable as something different, with deeper repercussions. Besides the casualties being spread across three districts, the epicentre being so close to Dhaka caused a projected 10 million people in Dhaka to feel โ€˜strong shakingโ€™, according to the United States Geological Survey, which is the leading authority on earthquake data worldwide.

Closer to the epicentre in Narsingdi, about 300,000 people were projected to have felt โ€˜high-intensityโ€™ shaking. Literally everyone we spoke to in the capital confirmed they had never felt the ground shaking like it did during Fridayโ€™s quake.

It was followed almost exactly 24 hours later by a much smaller aftershock, again with its epicentre in Narsingdiโ€™s Palash upazila. The BMD reported that this quake, measuring 3.3 on the Richter scale, occurred at 10:36am on Saturday, about 29 km west of the BMD Seismic Centre in Agargaon.

And then on Saturday evening, a third tremor in the space of 32 hours, considered a second aftershock of Fridayโ€™s quake, was felt in parts of Narsingdi and nearby districts including Dhaka. According to USGS, this latest quake measured 4.3 on the Richter scale and struck at 6:06pm local time, with its epicentre located 11 kilometres west of Narsingdi at a depth of 10 kilometres.

Even though no casualties were reported from either of the two aftershocks, they served to heighten anxiety, confirming that the fault lines lying deep beneath them in the earthโ€™s crust had become seismologically active.

Several buildings across various areas of Dhaka were damaged after Fridayโ€™s earthquake. According to the Dhaka district administration, at least 14 buildings in the capital sustained damage from the quake, while the Rajdhani Unnayan Kartripakkha (Rajuk) put the number at over 50, including many that had tilted.

For survivors, the psychological impact lingers. For many, the ground no longer feels stable, and the fear of a stronger quake currently haunts millions across Dhaka.

โ€œI am a student of Mujib Hall (2024โ€“2025 session). I became traumatised because of the earthquake. I live in the July Smriti Bhaban of Mujib Hall. Now, whenever a vehicle passes by my building or I hear even the slightest sound, I panic,โ€ a Dhaka University student shared.

โ€œIt feels as if another earthquake is happening. I repeatedly check my room and surroundings to see if there is a tremor,โ€ he added.

At least four students were seriously injured after jumping from the residential hall buildings of Dhaka University in panic during Fridayโ€™s quake. The university ended up first cancelling all classes scheduled for Sunday, before a syndicate meeting on Saturday suspended all academic activities till December 6, citing the physical and mental stress caused by the earthquake and its aftershocks, as well as the need to renovate the residential halls.

Risky Buildings in Dhaka

According to RAJUK, the first list of risky buildings was prepared in 2010 and updated in 2016. Currently, Dhaka has 321 extremely risky buildings, mostly in Old Dhaka. In 2024, RAJUK also identified 30 risky buildings across 21 educational institutions.

A RAJUK survey conducted under the Urban Resilience Project between 2018 and 2022 found that approximately 865,000 buildings in Dhaka could collapse if a 6.9-magnitude earthquake struck the Madhupur Fault near Tangail. Such a scenario could result in 210,000 deaths and 229,000 injuries if it occurred during daytime hours.

Bangladeshโ€™s cities, including Dhaka and Chattogram, remain highly vulnerable to earthquakes due to widespread disregard for building codes, master plans, and land-use zoning, according to the Institute for Planning and Development (IPD).

Adil Muhammad Khan, Professor at the Department of Urban and Regional Planning at Jahangirnagar University, emphasised the urgent need for preparedness, citing the recent 7.7-magnitude earthquake in Myanmar as a stark reminder of the risks.

Experts have also expressed concern that, despite the formation of multiple reform commissions, the interim government has yet to establish a dedicated authority for planned urbanisation, sustainable housing, and building safety.

The Bangladesh Institute of Planners criticised the formation of an advisory council allegedly influenced by real estate developers to amend Dhakaโ€™s Detailed Area Plan (DAP), favouring unrestricted high-rise construction.

A new paradigm in construction

When a 9.1-magnitude earthquake struck Japan in 2011, in buildings equipped with an innovation known as โ€˜base isolationโ€™, not even a glass fell from the shelves.

It is a construction technique in which the building (or other such establishment)is not rigidly attached to the ground. Instead, hundreds of special rubberโ€“lead bearings are installed beneath it. When an earthquake hits, the ground may shake violently, but the building above moves gently โ€” swaying slowly rather than shaking hard. As a result, people, furniture, equipment, and interior structures remain almost completely unaffected.

Today in Japan, nearly all new towers, buildings, hospitals, schools, and data centres are required to have this system. Even 40โ€“50-year-old buildings are being retrofitted by cutting the foundation and installing base isolation to give them a new, safer life.

Some engineers recommend that Bangladesh should move in this direction to save itself from a catastrophic situation in the future.

Under the Bangladesh National Building Code-2020 (BNBC-2020), important structures in Dhaka and Chattogram have already started using base-isolation systems. The Rooppur Nuclear Power Plant, several metro rail stations, and a few new towers are already implementing this technology.

A paper titled โ€œStatus of Base Isolation Applications in Bangladeshโ€ was presented at the 19th World Conference on Seismic Isolation, Energy Dissipation and Active Vibration Control of Structure at Berkeley, USA in September this year.

Tahmeed Al-Hussaini from Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology and Khondaker Sakil Ahmed from the Military Institute of Science and Technology described the significance of the use of this technology.

They mentioned that Bangladesh, located near the plate boundaries of Indian and Eurasian plates to its north and east, possesses significant seismic risk. Seismic Zone V of India, assigned with the highest seismic risk in that country, encircles Bangladesh on its northern and eastern sides.

Their paper also referred to the fact that base-isolation has been adopted in two major bridges of Bangladesh. The 4.8-km Jamuna Bridge contains seismic steel pintles for earthquake protection, while the 6.1-km Padma Bridge contains double concave friction pendulum bearings.

Analysis shows satisfactory performance of both base isolation systems. Particularly for Padma Bridge, the seismic demand on the bridge was large due to very deep pile foundations, double deck heavy superstructure and deep scour in the Padma River.

Research results show that base isolation may be satisfactorily applied for mid-rise to high-rise buildings in Bangladesh.

And the first application of base isolation to a building in Bangladesh is planned for a new headquarters of the Fire Service and Civil Defense in Dhaka.

Considering earthquake risk, Bangladesh is divided into three seismic zones. Among them, the high-risk areas fall under Zone-1, medium-risk areas under Zone-2, and the least-risk areas under Zone-3. A map published by the Meteorological Department identifies the earthquake-prone regions of the country.

In particular, nine districts of the Sylhet and Mymensingh divisions; parts of Tangail, Gazipur, and Narsingdi in the Dhaka division; the entire Kishoreganj district; Brahmanbaria in the Cumilla division; and large areas of the hill districts Khagrachhari and Rangamati are identified as high-risk zones.

Statistics show that between 1976 and 2015, Bangladesh experienced at least five major earthquakes. Almost all of these originated in Sylhet, Moulvibazar, Rangamati, Bandarban, and Coxโ€™s Bazar. Historically, it has been expected that these areas may also experience stronger quakes in the future.

But the rapid and unplanned development of centrally located Dhaka city in the period since independence, and its proximity to the epicentre of the weekendโ€™s tremors, are triggering renewed concerns over the fate that awaits the capitalโ€™s residents.

During the inspection at three affected areas of Dhaka on Saturday, the RAJUK Chairman Engineer Md Riazul Islam said this earthquake was a warning for us. โ€œIf we do not take it seriously, a major disaster awaits,โ€ he warned.

He added that authorities are preparing a list of the buildings that were damaged in the quake.

The risky structures are being inspected on-site, and those found highly unsafe are being sealed or closed.

โ€œIn some cases, dangerous installations are being removed. Unless all of us become aware and act responsibly, we may face a severe catastrophe in the near future.โ€

Environment adviser Syeda Rizwana Hasan has warned that nearly 90 per cent of old buildings in Dhaka were constructed without following the building codes, leaving the capital extremely vulnerable; especially in light of the recent earthquakes.

Speaking to journalists in Mirpur on Friday, she said the latest tremor should serve as a serious wake-up call for Bangladesh.

โ€œWe have never experienced earthquakes this strong. Repeated warnings are being issued; this is the time to prepare,โ€ she said.​
 

Government to establish dedicated taskforce to boost earthquake preparedness

bdnews24.com
Published :
Nov 24, 2025 22:36
Updated :
Nov 24, 2025 22:39

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Following a series of recent tremors, Chief Advisor Muhammad Yunus has said the government will form a taskforce on earthquake preparedness.

He held an emergency meeting with experts and relevant officials on Monday.

According to a statement from the Chief Advisorโ€™s Office, the government will quickly review written recommendations submitted by specialists and form the taskforce without delay.

The taskforce will include both public and private sector officials alongside independent experts, tasked with advising the government on immediate measures.

The emergency meeting came after four earthquakes struck Bangladesh over Friday and Saturday, causing widespread alarm.

Yunus convened top experts, researchers, and university faculty at his office, who emphasised that there is no need for panic, but precautionary measures are essential.

โ€œI do not want us to remain idle, nor do I want any unscientific steps to be taken. Provide your recommendations in written form quickly; the government is ready to take all necessary actions,โ€ the chief advisor said.

He added that committees of experts and one or more taskforces are already being organised, and actions will follow once expert advice is received.

The largest earthquake in decades struck early Friday morning, registering 5.7 on the Richter scale. Its epicentre was in Madhabdi, Narsingdi, just 13km from Dhaka, at a depth of 10km.

The quake claimed at least 10 lives across three districts and injured more than 600 people. Cracks emerged in numerous buildings in Dhaka, while some tilted dangerously.

โ€œThis tragedy, with lives lost and people injured, is deeply distressing. We must prepare so that it does not happen again,โ€ Yunus said.

He urged experts to provide written guidance on the governmentโ€™s course of action, including awareness campaigns and precautionary measures, to ensure the country is ready for any future incident.

Experts highlighted the need for drills and assessments, noting that coordination with Bangladeshi scientists and earthquake specialists abroad would be crucial.

The chief advisor suggested leveraging the Shubhechha mobile phone app to connect with overseas experts and to explore additional features for wider engagement.

Participants also discussed widespread misinformation circulating on social media, with unverified claims about imminent large-scale earthquakes.

Experts clarified that while historical data allows estimation of likely seismic activity, predicting exact dates and magnitudes is impossible.

Dhaka University Prof Md Zillur Rahman from the climate and disaster department stressed reviewing seismic sources and epicentres in and around Bangladesh to assess potential shaking intensities.

He noted that the likelihood of a major earthquake in Bangladesh is low, but preparation remains essential.

Geoscientist Prof Syed Humayun Akhtar highlighted the role of youth in raising public awareness, suggesting four-tiered planning at individual, institutional, indoor, and outdoor levels.

Chattogram University of Engineering and Technologyโ€™s Prof Jahangir Alam recommended special attention to critical infrastructure, including hospitals, schools, electricity, and gas networks, with earthquake awareness programmes to foster preparedness rather than panic.

Prof Zoynul Abedin of the Military Institute of Science and Technology stressed communicating clear guidance to the public, including identifying safe open spaces for drills and ensuring households and educational institutions conduct rehearsals.

Chief Engineer (Civil) of the Public Works Department Khalequezzaman Choudhury reported that a software system is already in place to collect images of buildings damaged by cracks from the recent quakes.

He added that over 200 buildings have been assessed so far, with most showing fissures in partition walls. The software enables rapid evaluation and planning of remedial measures.

Among the experts present were BUET professors Mehedi Ahmed Ansary, Tahmeed Malik Al-Hussaini, Tanvir Manzur, and Ishrat Islam; CUETโ€™s Prof Jahangir Alam; Md Momenul Islam, acting director of Bangladesh Meteorological Department; meteorologist Md Rubaiyat Kabir; geologist Reshad Md Ekram Ali; disaster expert Md Shakhawat Hossain of Dhaka University; and Director Md Moniruzzaman Khan of the Institute of Disaster Management and Vulnerability Studies of DU.​
 

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