Yogita Limaye is the one of the first foreign journalists to enter Myanmar since a huge earthquake hit the war-torn country.
Myanmar's military rulers have kept journalists out since the devastating earthquake, so CBS News' partners at the BBC went undercover to reveal the scale of the disaster.
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Agence France-Presse on MSNLike 'living in hell': Quake-hit Mandalay monastery clears away rubbleBare-handed monks slowly pick away the rubble that was once the wall of a historic Buddhist monastery in Mandalay, its ...
As of Thursday, the death toll across the country from the earthquake has risen to 3,145, with 4,589 others injured and 221 ...
Volunteers gathered to help, some coming in from other cities, to do whatever they could in the city near the epicenter of ...
Rescue workers at the U Hla Thein monastery said 270 monks were taking a religious exam when the quake hit, decimating the ...
Mandalay used to be known as the city of gold, dotted by glittering pagodas and Buddhist burial mounds, but the air in Myanmar’s former royal capital now reeks of dead bodies. So many corpses ...
The Indian Army’s Field Hospital under Operation Brahma continues to make life-saving efforts in Myanmar’s Mandalay. Show ...
A local in Mandalay tells Sky News that many of the buildings in the city are "collapsed or inclining", adding: "There are ...
BANGKOK: The body of Miss Tourism Myanmar 2018 Silimee was discovered beneath a 12-storey condominium in central Mandalay ...
Emergency rescue teams on Sunday began trickling into the area of Myanmar hardest hit by a massive earthquake that killed ...
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