Singapore Red Cross commits another $550,000 worth of supplies for Myanmar quake aid

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The Singapore Red Cross (SRC) has committed an additional tranche of humanitarian supplies worth $550,000 to help communities affected by the recent earthquake in Myanmar.

The supplies include hygiene kits for families, women's hygiene kits, plastic mats, mosquito nets and tarpaulins, as well as jerrycans for the collection, distribution and safe storage of clean water. They will be procured by SRC's counterparts in Myanmar.

These are expected to support about 8,000 households across the affected regions of Myanmar, SRC said on April 10.

Additionally, it has dispatched nearly 300 water filters to regions such as Mandalay and Sagaing - the epicentre of the 7.7 magnitude quake - to improve access to clean and safe drinking water, and nearly 900 solar powered lights to support communities without power.

The contributions are expected to benefit about 80,000 people devastated by the quake.

SRC has raised over $2.7 million for the cause through public fundraising, and has disbursed almost $700,000 worth of humanitarian aid so far.

The group has also sent a three-person team - consisting of two staff members and a volunteer - to Yangon to assess the evolving humanitarian situation in Myanmar and to coordinate further relief efforts.

It also cooperated with their Myanmar counterpart to deploy MRC volunteers and two ambulances to support the transfer of patients between the Singapore Emergency Medical Team (SGEMT) Field Hospital and the Mandalay General Hospital.

SRC has been coordinating closely with the Changi Regional HADR Coordination Centre, the Asean Coordinating Centre for Humanitarian Assistance on Disaster Management and the MRC to consolidate humanitarian aid from Singapore.

They are working together with other non-government organisations such as Mercy Relief and Relief Singapore to deliver the supplies to Myanmar.

Since the March 28 earthquake, there have been two shipments of supplies, SRC said.

The latest tranche of aid comes after an initial deployment worth $150,000, which included the distribution of essential supplies, such as water, blankets and tarpaulins, to address the immediate needs of the people affected by the quake.

The 7.7 magnitude earthquake was one of the strongest to hit Myanmar in a century.

More than 3,600 people were killed, with 5,017 injured and another 148 missing. Nearly 49,000 houses and more than 2,100 government buildings were also destroyed.

Gabrielle Andres for The Straits Times

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