10/10/2025
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Press release
Urgent humanitarian needs remain in Myanmar, over six months after devastating earthquakes – IFRC.
Yangon, Kuala Lumpur, Geneva, 10 October 2025 – Six months after powerful earthquakes struck central Myanmar, thousands of families are still living in fragile and unsafe conditions, particularly households headed by women, the elderly, those with special needs, and those in hard-to-reach areas and with limited means to rebuild.The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) urges continued attention on the humanitarian needs in Myanmar and seeks further support for meaningful assistance and recovery for affected populations.Since the earthquakes on 28 March 2025, Myanmar Red Cross Society (MRCS), working with the IFRC network and other partners, has reached more than 200,000 people across 30 affected townships.MRCS has been providing multisectoral assistance, including essential food and water relief, emergency shelter assistance, community health services through mobile clinics, assistance to address basic daily needs in a dignified manner that enables affected people to choose their own priorities, community-based initiatives such as water and sanitation solutions, psychosocial support, and child-friendly spaces which provide joy and respite to children and their carers alike.The IFRC has been working hand in hand with the MRCS throughout this response and will continue efforts to help the most vulnerable communities recover and rebuild their lives, working in a neutral and impartial manner.The IFRC emphasizes the critical importance of ensuring sustainability of humanitarian services through deepening localization and stronger community-based approaches, as the MRCS and IFRC network are promoting. Through local presence, strong community participation and acceptance, recovery activities must be based on dignity and protection for affected populations.Six months after the earthquakes, Mr. Xavier Castellanos, Under Secretary General for National Society Development and Coordination of the IFRC, met with earthquake affected communities, Myanmar Red Cross Society (MRCS) volunteers, and local community leaders in Mandalay, Sagaing, and Naypyitaw.In Sagaing Region, MRCS operates a community mobile clinic serving earthquake-affected and displaced communities twice a week. Many of the patients seek care for non-communicable diseases, underscoring the importance of continuous community health services in disaster-affected areas. In parallel, other communities are receiving essential relief items and assistance to address their immediate needs, and dozens of affected families in Amarapura and Sagaing are receiving support on safe shelter approaches. Elderly sisters in Tatkon township, Naypyitaw, point to the rubble of their destroyed home which they could not afford to clear, before they could even start thinking about rebuilding.“Affected families consistently told us about their top priority needs: repairing or rebuilding their damaged or destroyed homes, accessing healthcare and medicine especially for chronic illnesses among the elderly, accessing education and ensuring livelihoods to enable them to provide for their families and sustain themselves,” said Mr. Castellanos. “These choices reflect the dignity and priorities of people who know best what their families need.”MRCS volunteers, working tirelessly every day over the past six months, have delivered critical humanitarian assistance despite ongoing challenges: essential relief items, safe drinking water, psychosocial support, and care for children, creating child-friendly spaces of hope and humanity amidst crisis. Inspiring youth volunteers, motivated by wanting to be helpful to those in need, have a key role in growing understanding, trust and acceptance within communities.“Seeing the teams in action and meeting communities recovering from this devastating earthquake reconfirms the critical role of the Myanmar Red Cross Society in this complex setting, working alongside IFRC and our partners. I was very touched by the volunteers’ stories about how they provided any assistance they could, first to their families then to their communities, and how deeply that was appreciated by affected populations, both elderly and young,” Mr. Castellanos noted. “Their efforts are saving lives, restoring dignity, and giving people hope for the future.”Despite significant progress on the earthquake response, the damage was so massive in scale that considerable urgent needs remain. Too many families still live in damaged or unsafe shelters. Many more are affected by the multi-layered humanitarian situation in Myanmar, including unprecedented floods last year, with their vulnerability most recently impacted by the earthquakes. Damaging coping mechanisms are pushing these communities further into crisis.The Federation-wide Myanmar Earthquake Emergency appeal is currently 25% funded, with a significant funding gap. The IFRC expresses its gratitude for the generous funding received to date as well as the strong solidarity and humanitarian response capacities throughout the IFRC network. IFRC also underlines the complimentary work of the components of the International Red Cross Red Crescent Movement, based on their areas of expertise.Further resources and donor support are urgently needed to continue providing humanitarian services, to scale up support for recovery and resilience and to invest in long-term recovery for affected communities. Recovery will continue to take time and based on continuing exchanges with communities and market analysis, it will be more costly than initially planned. Linking sustainable recovery efforts with integrated community resilience, disaster preparedness and consolidation of community mechanisms will be critical to ensuring a safer and more dignified future for families affected by the earthquakes and other shocks.To support the ongoing response of IFRC and MRCS, please contribute to the Myanmar Earthquake Emergency Appeal.Audiovisual materials: https://shared.ifrc.org/collections/5562For more information or to request an interview, please contact: [email protected] Kuala Lumpur: Afrhill Rances, +60 192 713 641In Geneva: Scott Craig, +41 76 370 3575 Notes for editors:Myanmar Red Cross Society (MRCS) Response (up to 30 September 2025) and the IFRC network’s support The earthquakes of 28 March 2025 are reported as having caused widespread damage, over 1.35 million people have been affected from more than 55 townships across five states and regions (Mandalay, Sagaing, Naypyitaw, Southern Shan and Bago). 3,815 lives were lost, over 5,104 injured, and more than 200,000 people were displaced.Since 28 March 2025, Myanmar Red Cross Society (MRCS) has reached more than 200,000 people across 30 townships with the support from Movement partners and external partners.More than 99,359 people have received health care, and more than 1.3 million liters of safe drinking water have been distributed. Sanitation and hygiene services have reached 170,961 people through the clean water supply, construction of latrines, distribution of water tanks and water filters, distribution of hygiene kits and cleaning materials, and hygiene awareness sessions.More than 157,904 people have received shelter and household items such as shelter kits, tarpaulins, mosquito nets, and kitchen sets. Multipurpose assistance reached over 100,000 people. In addition, 150 households received assistance for latrine construction.More than 126,922 people have received food and livelihood assistance, mainly mobilized locally from individuals and non-Movement partners of MRCS.Considering protection, gender and inclusion (PGI), more than 19,220 people have been reached with gender and age specific items such as dignity kits, infant kits, and delivery kits.MRCS received 300 metric tonnes of relief and goods in country, from the IFRC Network, other partners, and donor governments.32 National Societies globally have, to date, supported MRCS in this operation (financially, with in-kind donations, or with technical support).MRCS has deployed over 698 volunteers from its network of trained and experienced volunteers countrywide.