The Citizen (KZN)

Temples take brunt of quake

ENGINEERS SURVEY AT LEAST 185 PAGODAS DAMAGED IN TOURIST DESTINATIO­N Two young girls and a man confirmed dead.

- Bagan

Myanmar took stock of toppled spires and crumbling temple walls in the ancient capital Bagan yesterday after a powerful earthquake hit the country, killing three and damaging the top tourist destinatio­n.

Two young girls and a man died in Magway region where the 6.8 magnitude quake struck on Wednesday evening, cracking buildings across the country and sending tremors that were felt as far away as Bangkok and Kolkata.

In Bagan, home to about 2 500 Buddhist monuments that are among Myanmar’s most venerated religious sites, teams of government-dispatched engineers and architects surveyed damage to nearly 200 of the prized pagodas.

“First we need to figure out the extent of the damage,” Arkar Kyaw, the deputy director of Myanmar’s culture ministry said.

“Then we will make a renovation plan,” he said, adding the government is working directly with Unesco. First estimates showed at least 185 pagodas at Bagan were damaged, as security officers blocked tourists from entering temples while workers cleared piles of bricks, swept the grounds and sorted through fragments of murals.

“I heard sounds after I paid homage at a pagoda. There were foreign tourists there as well,” said Khin Maung Toe, a Myanmar man who was visiting Bagan for the first time when the earthquake struck. “My wife barely escaped outside as the pagoda collapsed,” he said.

The temples, many of which are about 1 000 years old, are a top attraction for tourists flocking to Myanmar as it emerges from decades of military rule.

Bagan’s sweeping expanse of temple ruins – which make for a staggering sunset vista – have survived wars, earthquake­s and centuries of tropical sun.

In its heyday, between the 9th and 13th centuries, the city was the capital of a powerful kingdom and one of Asia’s most important centres for learning.

“It’s really heartbreak­ing. I cannot even eat,” said Tin Hla Oo, a trustee of the three-storey Htilominlo pagoda, which was badly damaged by the quake.

“These pagodas are priceless."

The last major quake to damage Bagan struck in 1975 and was followed by a controvers­ial restoratio­n effort using modern materials. – AFP

 ?? Picture: Reuters ?? MISSING LINK. People walk as the top of a collapsed pagoda is seen in the background after an earthquake in Bagan, Myanmar, yesterday.
Picture: Reuters MISSING LINK. People walk as the top of a collapsed pagoda is seen in the background after an earthquake in Bagan, Myanmar, yesterday.

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