Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Covid surge overwhelms Myanmar burial volunteers

Every day my team is collecting between 30 to 40 dead bodies

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YANGON, Myanmar

(AFP) — With hospitals in junta-run Myanmar empty of pro-democracy medical staff and coronaviru­s cases surging nationwide, volunteers are going house-to-house to collect the fast-rising number of victims dying in their homes.

Early each morning, Than Than Soe’s phone starts ringing with requests from family members of those who have died in the commercial capital Yangon.

She writes the name, address and contact number of the victim in a ledger and dispatches a team to their home. “We are running our service without resting,” she told AFP at the bustling office of her volunteer group.

Every day “my team is collecting between 30 to 40 dead bodies... I think other teams will be the same like us.” “Sometimes, there are two dead bodies in one house.” Hospitals around the country are empty of both doctors and patients because of a long-running strike against the military regime that seized power in February.

Widespread anger at the coup — and fear of being seen to cooperate with the regime — is also keeping many away from military-run hospitals, leaving volunteers to source precious oxygen and bring the dead for cremation.

Sann Oo, who began working as a volunteer driver when the pandemic’s first wave hit Myanmar last year, says a typical working day is now at least 13 hours long.

“We used to send patients to hospitals,” he told AFP. “We asked patients‘whichhospi­tal do you wanna go to?’

“But now it’s different. When we receive incoming calls, we have to ask, ‘Which cemetery?’” Authoritie­s reported almost 5,500 cases on Saturday, up from around 50 per day in early May, but analysts say the true toll is likely much higher. At the house of one victim, Sann Oo and the team strap the corpse onto a stretcher, cover it with a blanket and navigate the narrow wooden staircase down to the street.

They carry the stretcher to the van while another volunteer hits a gong used in Buddhist funeral rites. As they arrive at the Kyi Su crematoriu­m there are at least eight other ambulances already parked outside.

The words “Dead Body Carrier” adorn the windscreen of one of the vehicles.

 ?? MUSTAFA KAYA/XINHUA ?? SCENIC Cappadocia in Turkey gets an aerial visit from a hot-air balloon.
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