
In Singapore, the Myanmar area is one of the many ways that the country’s citizens are assisting with sending aid home in the wake of a dangerous 7.7-magnitude earthquake.
In the strongest earthquake to struck Southeast Asia in over a millennium, over 2,700 people have been confirmed dead. According to Myanmar’s defense head Min Aung Hlaing, hundreds more have been injured, and the dying toll is expected to exceed 3, 000.
The country’s aid organizations have been warned that serious needs call for food, water, and shelter, and that the time for save efforts is rapidly closing.  ,
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Pastors Daniel Kyaw and Yamin Thiri, who are husband and wife, quickly emailed their people in Myanmar to make sure they were safe when they learned of the disaster.  ,
The couple was “broken and unhappy” for those who were severely hit, according to Yangon native Pastor Yamin, despite the fact that their family members were not. It’s a lifestyle that has been destroyed and broken. So that’s truly heartbreaking,” she said.
They immediately switched to motion rather than acting solely out of emotion. The pair began mapping out the hardest-hit areas and identifying important supply needs in cooperation with local temples and ministers on the ground, along with the Myanmar community of Cornerstone Community Church in Singapore.
Along with their community, which includes a large number of local workers, they began sourcing and making relief supplies like tents, grain, oil, and waters purification tablets, some of which are more readily available in Singapore than in Myanmar.
” We will take anything from Singapore that they can’t find in Myanmar,” said Pastor Yamin. We are attempting to identify the gaps that we can pack as a group.
Logistics for travel are currently being worked out to transport the supplies from Yangon to more seriously affected places like Mandalay. The religion continues to offer emotional support to people whose families were affected, many of whom are able to return home as a result of ongoing social instability.