- The CSR struggle failed to inform officials of attendance in the area.
- Security fired shots in the air after the Chinese convoy stopped.
- The Chinese FM Spox asks the routes to be uninterrupted.
Bangkok: Myanmar’s Juti said on Wednesday that her soldiers opened fire in a Chinese Red Cross Ed convoy, which outlined the challenge of giving relief between a civil war as support groups asked for better access to help people survived by destructive earthquakes.
After its coup against the elected civilian government of Nobel Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi in 2021, the army fought to run Myanmar, which reduced basic services including economy and healthcare after civil war.
Juunt spokesman Zau Min Tun said that the Chinese Red Cross did not inform the officials that it was in a struggle area on Tuesday night, and a security team fired in the air after the convoy, which included local vehicles, failing to stop.
A Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman said that the aid team and supply were safe, and called all parties in Myanmar to ensure the safety of the rescue team.
“It is necessary to keep the transport routes open and uninterrupted for relief efforts,” Guo Jiakun said at a press conference.

Myanmar State Media said the firing occurred as a toll of death from 7.7-parade earthquake on Friday, with 4,639 injuries to 2,886.
The International Crisis Group said that the rural parts of the hard-hit teak sector were mostly under control of armed resistance groups fighting military government.
A statement stated, “They are the most challenging for support agencies, which are the rule, a complex configuration of local administration and control by armed resistance groups, and to control frequent conflicts,” said in a statement.
Even before the earthquake, ICG said, it was difficult to gather information from such areas, as part of the conflict as a janta blackout of the Internet and mobile phone network as part of the conflict.
“Sainiks are everywhere in the city,” told a man who tried teak, told him Roots“They are for safety, not for rescue. They check every vehicle.”

New York -based Human Rights Watch urged Juten to allow unfit access to humanitarian aid and raise karbas affecting the aid agencies, donors should assist channels through independent groups instead of only join officials.
“Myanmar’s Junta cannot be trusted to respond to the disaster of this scale,” said Bryoni Lau, director of Human Rights Watch Deputy Asia, Human Rights Watch.
“The concerned governments and international agencies need to suppress the jute to allow perfect and immediate access to the survivors wherever they are.”
The army rejected allegations of misunderstandings that it committed extensive torture as it was fought against a multi-dimensional rebellion after the coup.
The rebels have accused the army of an airstrike even after the earthquake and on Tuesday a major rebel coalition declared a unilateral ceasefire to help in relief efforts.
Millions affected
The United Nations stated that there were more than 28 million people in six areas affected by the earthquake, and it had $ 12 million in emergency funding for food, shelter, water, hygiene, mental health assistance and other services.

The United Nations Office (UNOPS) for the United Nations Office (UNOPS) said, “The situation remains significant, with obstructed communication and access to road reaction, especially in teak.”
Australia announced $ 6.5 million ($ 4.1 million) in human support for Myanmar, “completely through international and local partners”.
In a statement on Wednesday, External Affairs Minister Penny Wong said, “We take active steps to ensure that our help does not legalize military rule in Myanmar.”
A woman from Mandley near Quake Epiketor told Reuters that the officials were building a platform for this month’s Thingen Water Festival, although many were homeless, in which the bodies were left under the collapsed buildings.
The military council has dismissed requests from international journalists to cover the devastation of the earthquake, citing lack of water, electricity and hotels.
In neighboring Thailand, the death toll from earthquake on Wednesday was 22, in which hundreds of buildings were damaged.

A discovery for those survived in the debris of a skyscraper in the capital, Bangkok entered their fifth day with a change in the role for some rescue dogs on the site, where 15 people were killed and 72 are missing.
Officials said two dogs were assured to provide emotional assistance to the families of missing people.
It brought a small feeling of rest, Chanpen Kevoi said, whose mother and younger sister are missing.
“He said that as long as the dog hears a sign, the dog keeps barking, there is still a chance that someone can be alive,” he said.
The government is investigating the collapse and initial tests showed that some steel samples from the site were inferior.