SCDF sends 80-member team to aid quake-stricken Myanmar
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SINGAPORE - An 80-strong force and four search canines from the Singapore Civil Defence Force (SCDF) left for Myanmar on March 29 to assist rescue efforts in the quake-battered country.
The Operation Lionheart contingent departed around 1pm, at full strength for the first time since a mission to Turkey in 2023, also for earthquake relief, an SCDF spokesman told The Straits Times.
A 7.7-magnitude earthquake on March 28 killed more than 1,600 people in Myanmar
SCDF is answering the military junta’s rare call for aid with a contingent including the elite Disaster Assistance and Rescue Team, full-time national servicemen doctors, paramedics, and search and hazardous materials specialists, it said in a Facebook post.
The contingent was at the SCDF’s headquarters in Ubi on the morning of March 29 for a briefing before it took off on a Singapore Airlines flight arranged “on short notice”.
At about 6pm local time (7.30pm Singapore time), the team arrived in Naypyidaw, which is one of the worst-hit areas. As one of the first international rescue teams there, the Singapore contingent will commence search and rescue operations at the earliest opportunity on March 30, SCDF said in an update on the evening of March 29.
The team took with them battery-operated urban search and rescue equipment like cutting, breaking and lifting tools, as well as life-detection devices and fibre-optic scopes.
These will allow them to move swiftly to disaster areas for immediate search and rescue work, said SCDF.
Operation Lionheart chief Tay Zhi Wei said on March 29 that the mission is expected to last up to 14 days, depending on the situation.
Locating and rescuing survivors is the primary mission, but the 80-strong force is prepared to “adapt its efforts based on the situation on the ground and the needs of the community”, he said.
Minister of State for Home Affairs Faishal Ibrahim was at the SCDF headquarters to thank deployed officers and join their families in sending them off.
Associate Professor Faishal, who is also Minister of State for National Development, said: “I am confident that they will be able to do the mission well.”
He said he was “elated and touched” by the spirit of SCDF officers – who told him they were “ever ready” – and moved by their loved ones, who turned up in force at Ubi, though some were informed only at 1am on March 29.
Minister of State for Home Affairs Faishal Ibrahim (centre, in blue) joined families of deployed officers in sending the team off at Ubi on March 29.
PHOTO: LIANHE ZAOBAO
Another three SCDF officers will be sent to Myanmar as part of an Asean emergency response team, added SCDF.
It thanked Singapore Airlines, ST Logistics and the Sats Singapore Hub team for their rapid assistance in this major disaster situation, where speed of aid is crucial.
“We wish our Operation Lionheart contingent a safe and successful mission,” it said.
The March 28 quake
Much of the damage was in Mandalay, the epicentre of the quake and Myanmar’s largest city after Yangon.
Meanwhile, the Singapore Red Cross pledged an initial $150,000 in emergency relief support

