Tue, 21-Oct-2025

Women bear additional burdens as a result of Turkey’s earthquake 

Turkey
  • Doctor Meltem Gunbegi reconnects women with the basics they feel uncomfortable
  • The death toll from the 7.8-magnitude earthquake has risen to over 46,000 in Turkey.
  • According to a top UN official, the damage alone totaled more than $100 billion.

The shelves of the makeshift clinic, which is little more than an orange storage container, contain everything women are too afraid to ask for on the streets of Turkey’s earthquake zone.

Doctor Meltem Gunbegi reconnects women with the basics they feel uncomfortable discussing in the crowds of mass aid distribution centres, from underwear to period and contraception products.

She also lends a sympathetic ear, assisting the women of Antakya, Turkey‘s devastated southern city, in processing the grief and death they have experienced in the last month.

The death toll from the 7.8-magnitude earthquake has risen to over 46,000 in Turkey and nearly 6,000 in Syria, making it one of the world’s ten deadliest in the last century.

According to a top United Nations official, the damage alone totaled more than $100 billion, with additional funds required for recovery costs.

“Many are shy when it comes to asking for basics, such as bras, wax bands and tweezers, so they come and visit our container,” said the 33-year-old doctor.

According to Gunbegi, more women are experiencing genital problems as a result of poor hygiene conditions in tent cities across the 11 quake-affected provinces.

But she also sees women who are clearly in shock and are too traumatised to think about their own bodies, even when they are pregnant.

“They experienced a lot of death and destruction,” said the doctor. “They really don’t seem to think about the baby. They are in a state of trauma.”

Semire Duman, a 51-year-old earthquake survivor who has been living in a tent for a month, said women have many needs.

“We have no shower, no toilet, no water, nothing,” she told AFP, and then almost whispered: “We don’t have underwear.”

Gazele Sumer, 57, expressed dissatisfaction with the lack of privacy in tents

“We are six people in one tent,” she said. “We sit here, we eat there, we sleep here,” she added.

‘Insecure’

Selver Buyukkeles, an earthquake survivor who works with the Mor (Purple) Solidarity, said that even before the February 6 quake, women bore the brunt of daily burdens such as chores and family care.

They are now attempting to do the same while dealing with personal pain and the acute sense of insecurity that comes with street life.

“Women queue to get food at distribution centres. They cook, and they take care of the children and the elderly. They do the dishes. They do the laundry,” the 28-year-old said.

“Women feel responsible for their family’s situation. They fear a new earthquake and the communal life in tents makes them insecure,” she said.

Despite Turkey’s poor record on the issue, activists and doctors interviewed have not seen any more cases of domestic violence or abuse at this point.

Fidan Ataselim, secretary general of the We Will Stop Femicide Platform, has called for the establishment of “safe shelters” and “prevention centres” for women in affected areas.

We Will Stop Femicide raises awareness about the murder and abuse of women in the predominantly Muslim but officially secular state.

According to data compiled by the platform, at least 327 women were killed and 793 were injured in 2022.

‘Safe zone’

Back at Antakya’s Dostluk (Friendship) park, not far from Gunbegi’s makeshift clinic, volunteers work in shifts to ensure the safety of the 200 women who have taken refuge in dozens of tents.

Others are stationed outside toilets and shower cabins.

“Safe zone for women and LGBT+ here,” proclaims posters in Turkish and Arabic.

The Arabic is a nod to the millions of refugees and migrants who have been living in southern Turkey since the civil war in neighbouring Syria began 12 years ago.

“We have a security system for both women and LGBT+, who are more vulnerable in such disasters,” said Aslihan Keles, 23, one of the volunteers in the park.

On March 8, the official International Women’s Day, Turkish women frequently join marches demanding better lives and protection from domestic violence.

However, things are different in the earthquake zone this year, according to Keles.

“Here, there is an emergency,” she said. “This time, we are in the field — but for a very good cause.”

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Sajid Hussain Turi paid a condolence visit to Turkey Embassy

Sajid Hussain Turi

Pakistan extended full support to Turkey. In the wake of the earthquake. Sajid Hussain Turi expresses condolences and solidarity. Sajid Hussain Turi is a Pakistani politician who has been a member of Pakistan’s National Assembly since August 2018. He Paid a condolence visit to Turkey Embassy in Pakistan and expressed our condolences, sorrow, solidarity & … Read more

Govt ready to provide more assistance to Turkiye: Ishaq Dar

Ishaq Dar
  • Finance Minister Ishaq Dar met Turkish Ambassador during a meeting.
  • Maximum facilities would be provided to the Turkish investor.
  • Turkish Ambassador expressed gratitude.

Islamabad – Finance Minister Ishaq Dar has announced that the government is prepared to offer additional aid to Turkey.

The discussion came during a meeting between Turkish Ambassador Dr. Mehmet Paçacı and Dar, where topics such as economic, trade, and investment cooperation between the two nations were discussed.

The Turkish Ambassador took the opportunity to express his concerns about the obstacles faced by Turkish firms that operate in Pakistan.

The Finance Minister ensured the Ambassador that maximum facilities would be provided to Turkish investors, adding that the people of Pakistan empathize with the Turkish people in the wake of the recent earthquake.

Dar further declared that the Pakistani government is ready to offer more assistance as Turkey has strong bilateral relations with Pakistan.

In response, expressing deep gratitude, the Turkish ambassador thanked Pakistan for providing immediate aid in difficult times.

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Kylian Mbappe pledged to do his best to help earthquake victims in Turkey

Kylian Mbappe earthquake

Kylian Mbappe is the French football star for PSG. He pledged to do everything he could to help earthquake victims in Turkey. He posted Turkish flag and prayer emojis for Türkiye on twitter. Kylian Mbappe, the French football star for Paris Saint-Germain, pledged on Wednesday to do everything he could to help earthquake victims in … Read more

Tayyip Erdogan seeks forgiveness over quake rescue delays

Tayyip Erdogan

World Bank estimates that the 6 February earthquakes in Turkey and Syria will cost $34 billion. But the cost of reconstruction may be double that amount. Erdogan is campaigning for re-election as president in the wake of the earthquake. President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has appealed residents of a region of Turkey that was severely affected … Read more

At least one died as magnitude 5.6 quake hits Turkey

Turkey

The most recent earthquake in eastern Turkey has caused at least one fatality. And numerous injuries, also the collapse of some damaged structures. The most recent earthquake was centered in the town of Yesilyurt in the Malatya province. A magnitude 5.6 earthquake that struck eastern Turkey has resulted in at least one fatality, numerous injuries, … Read more

Turkey broadens its probe into building collapses as quake toll approaches 50,000

Turkey
  • 84 people accused of being responsible for the collapse of structures have been arrested.
  • The cumulative number of dead in Turkey and bordering Syria is more than 50,000.
  • The mayor of the Nurdagi district in the province of Gaziantep was also arrested.

A minister said on Saturday that Turkey has arrested 184 people accused of being responsible for the collapse of structures in this month’s earthquakes, and that investigations are expanding as anger grows over what many regards as fraudulent building practices.

The death toll from the earthquakes, the most intense of which struck in the middle of the night on February 6, increased to 44,128 in Turkey overnight. That took the cumulative number of dead in Turkey and bordering Syria to more than 50,000.

The disaster, Turkey’s biggest in modern history, destroyed or badly damaged about 160,000 buildings and 520,000 units.

During a news conference in the southeastern city of Diyarbakir, which was one of ten provinces affected by the disaster, Justice Minister Bekir Bozdag revealed that more than 600 persons had been probed in connection with collapsed structures.

According to him, those formally detained and held in custody include 79 construction contractors, 74 people with legal responsibility for buildings, 13 property owners, and 18 people who had made improvements to properties.

Many Turks are outraged by what they perceive to be fraudulent building methods and defective urban development.

President Tayyip Erdogan, who faces the most serious electoral challenge of his two-decade rule in the June elections, has promised accountability.

Haber and other media, the mayor of the Nurdagi district in the province of Gaziantep, who is a member of Erdogan’s ruling AK Party, was among those arrested as part of the investigations into collapsed structures.

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Turkish journalists Ali Koçer arrested over earthquake reports

Ali Koçer

Mir Ali Koçer, a freelance journalist, is being investigated for allegedly spreading “false news”. And could face up to three years in prison. On Twitter, he posted accounts of rescuers and survivors. Mir Ali Koçer drove down to the damaged area, picked up his camera and microphone, and began interviewing survivors. The catastrophic earthquake that … Read more

Death toll in Turkey and Syria has surpassed 50,000

Turkey and Syria
  • The earthquakes killed 44,218 people in Turkey.
  • While the latest confirmed death toll in Syria was 5,914.
  • The first earthquake struck southeastern Turkey and northern Syria on February 6.

The number of people killed by the earthquakes that struck Turkey and Syria earlier this month has now passed 50,000, according to the latest figures from both countries.

The earthquakes killed 44,218 people in Turkey alone, according to the country’s Disaster and Emergency Management Authority (AFAD), while the latest confirmed death toll in Syria was 5,914.

The first earthquake, which struck southeastern Turkey and northern Syria on February 6, had a magnitude of 7.7, while a second, which occurred a few days later, had a magnitude of 7.6. According to the AFAD, the region has been pounded by almost 9,000 aftershocks since.

Almost 240,000 rescue workers, including volunteers, are still working in Turkey’s 11 earthquake-affected provinces. Some of the quake-affected areas were originally impossible to access, but recovery efforts are ongoing, and casualty numbers are climbing as time goes on.

In recent days, there has been no news of survivors being rescued.

In Turkey alone, about 530,000 people have been evacuated from the disaster region, and the Turkish government has reported that 173,000 buildings have collapsed or been seriously damaged, with more than 1.9 million people seeking refuge in temporary shelters, hotels, and public facilities.

The quake has affected around 20 million people in Turkey, while the United Nations estimates 8.8 million people in Syria. Little information has emerged from Syria, where many people had already been living in precarious conditions as a result of years of civil war.

Many survivors have fled the affected areas of southern Turkey or have taken refuge in tents, container homes, and other government-sponsored shelters.

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Turkish journalists arrested over earthquake reports

Turkish
  • Mir Ali Koçer publicized survivor and rescuer stories on Twitter.
  • He is now being investigated for creating “false news” and could face up to three years in prison.
  • He is one of at least four journalists being probed for reporting or commenting on the earthquake.

Mir Ali Koçer, a freelance journalist, was 200 miles from the epicenter when Turkey was struck by a catastrophic earthquake on February 6. He drove down to the impacted area with his camera and microphone in hand to interview survivors.

He publicized survivor and rescuer stories on Twitter and is now being investigated for creating “false news” and could face up to three years in prison.

He is one of at least four journalists being probed for reporting or commenting on the earthquake.

Hundreds more, according to press freedom organizations, have been arrested, harassed, or prohibited from reporting.

Earthquakes in both Turkey and Syria killed at least 50,000 people.

The Turkish authorities have made no statement on the detentions.

I couldn’t hold back my tears

Mr. Koçer, who is Kurdish and contributes to pro-opposition news sites such as Bianet and Duvar, was smoking on his balcony in the south-eastern city of Diyarbakir on the night of the earthquake when his two dogs began barking.

He recalls them barking exactly like that in 2020, seconds before a minor earthquake shook eastern Turkey.

“I felt I was shaking. I felt the house shaking, I felt the TV shaking,” says Mr. Koçer. He hid under a dinner table with the dogs and then rushed outside.

Mr. Koçer left Diyarbakir and drove to the city of Gaziantep. He was shocked by scenes of destruction and victims enduring freezing temperatures in towns near the very epicenter of the quake.

At least 3,000 of the earthquake’s victims died in Gaziantep.

“When holding the microphone, behind the camera, or in front of the camera, I could not hold back my tears,” Mr. Koçer recalls.

Provocateurs

The surge of volunteers and rescue teams from Western Turkey moved Mr. Koçer, and he shared their stories on Twitter. Several of the survivors told him they had gone days without receiving assistance. Similar allegations were made by pro-opposition news outlets.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan told people in earthquake-affected areas that he would reconstruct their cities. But he also warned that individuals propagating “fake news” and “causing social disorder” would be jailed, labeling them “provocateurs”.

Mr. Koçer claims that while he was reporting from the earthquake-affected zone, Diyarbakir police placed a message at his residence telling him to go to the police station and make a statement.

He was informed at the station that he was being probed under a freshly enacted misinformation statute. He claimed that the police questioned him about his reporting from the epicenter of the earthquake and accused him of spreading fake information.

Turkey’s new law went into effect in October. It criminalized public deception and allowed the state considerably broader control over news outlets and social media.

The Venice Commission, the Council of Europe’s legal watchdog, warned the bill would limit freedom of expression.

It is referred to as a “censorship law” by opposition parties.

‘They don’t like criticism’

Mr. Koçer says that he was diligent in his job, interviewing everyone from survivors to police, gendarmes, and rescue workers. “I did not release anything without first conducting extensive research and analysis,” he says.

Reporters Without Borders (RSF) condemned the probe into Mr. Koçer as “absurd” and demanded authorities discontinue it.

At least three more journalists are facing criminal accusations, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), an advocacy group.

Merdan Yanarda and Enver Aysever are well-known political analysts in Istanbul with substantial social media followings. Both have criticized the government’s efforts to save the country. Both are being investigated, as is Mehmet Güleş, who, like Mr Koçer, is located in Diyarbakir. He was arrested on accusations of “inciting hatred” after questioning a volunteer who was critical of him.

It is unknown how many additional journalists are being investigated. The police stated on Tuesday that they detained 134 people for “provocative posts” and arrested 25 of them, although their identities were not released. Some of those jailed may have been spreading lies, such as the one that Afghan migrants were scavenging in devastated neighborhoods.

But, critics claim that the crackdown has gone well beyond those propagating dangerous misinformation.

“The government is trying to suppress information coming from the quake zone,” says cyber rights expert Yaman Akdeniz who teaches at the Istanbul Bilgi University.

The arrests came after Turkey’s presidential communications director warned against “lethal disinformation” jeopardizing the rescue efforts. The directorate also rolled out a smartphone app called “Disinformation Reporting Service” encouraging people to report manipulative posts about the quake.

“Any time [Turkish] officials and the government are being criticized, they don’t like it,” says Arzu Geybulla, a journalist in Istanbul covering digital authoritarianism and censorship.

“But this time they are perhaps more vocal.”

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PM salutes Rescue 1122 for saving lives of earthquake victims in Turkey

PM salutes
  • He said teams work day and night with the spirit of humanity.
  • PM further said that it is a proud to see the rescue team returning home.
  • He said people of Turkey expressed their heartwarming gratitude for team.

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif has said that he salutes the brave sons of the nation who saved the lives of the earthquake victims in Turkey.

In his Twitter message, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said he salutes the brave and dutiful sons of the nation who saved the lives of the sisters, brothers, and children of Turkey during the earthquake disaster. He said teams work day and night with the spirit of humanity.

 

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif further said that it is a proud and inspiring sight to see the rescue team of Rescue 1122 returning home after the completion of the rescue operation in Turkey.

On the other hand, Minister for Information and Broadcasting Marriyum Aurangzeb said the people of Turkiye expressed their “heartwarming gratitude” for the Rescue 1122 team on their departure from Istanbul Airport for Pakistan.

“Heartwarming expression of gratitude for Pakistan’s Rescue 1122 Team at Istanbul Airport, departing for Pakistan,” she tweeted.

The minister also shared a video showing scenes from the Istanbul Airport where people paid tribute to the Rescue 1122 team for their rescue and relief efforts in Turkiye after the earthquake.

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Earthquake in Turkey and Syria: UK aid appeal tops £100 million

Turkey earthquake

The DEC has raised over £100 million for earthquake victims in Turkey and Syria. With celebrities including Daniel Craig, Tamsin Greig, Michael Palin, and Richard Coles endorsing appeal. 1.5m in the southern region of Turkey are now homeless as a result of earthquakes. In just two weeks, more than £100 million has been raised for … Read more

Turkey guy meets his family after 11 days, video will makes you cry

Turkey
  • A video of a man in Turkey who was rescued from the rubble has gone viral.
  • It took 11 days before the man was saved.
  • 5.5 million people have watched the video.

Devastating earthquakes and their aftershocks shook Turkey and Syria, killing many people. Even though Saturday marked the 12th day in a row that rescue efforts were ongoing, the number of fatalities from the earthquakes surpassed 46,000. People were pulled from the rubble, offering some optimism, though. Just like Mustafa Avci, a 34-year-old man. One such story that will just make you gasp is about his miraculous rescue.

Avci’s happiness at becoming a father for the first time was short-lived, according to a DailyMail article, since the earthquake destroyed the private Academy Hospital in Antakya just hours after his wife gave birth to a baby girl. Fortunately, Avci’s wife Bilge and daughter were recovered without incident, but Avci was missing.

Finally, after 11 days of waiting, he was extricated from the wreckage. Avci can be seen talking to his family in a video that has gone viral.

Look at this:

“I didn’t think I’d ever be discovered again… I never anticipated coming out. I believed my wife and kids were no longer alive. Now, I am very joyful. I experience a rebirth-like sensation. According to the DailyMail story, Mustafa claimed, “I simply experience a little ache.

In the video, Avci is heard saying, “May God bless you a thousand times, brother,” while kissing the rescuer’s hand that is holding the phone in appreciation. May God constantly provide for your needs,” the report concluded.

Twitter users couldn’t stop expressing their affection for Avci’s family. The fact that the family was reunited was acknowledged by many.

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Earthquake in Turkey & Syria: Baby pulled from the rubble reunited with aunt and uncle

Syria

An aunt and uncle have adopted a newborn born. Hundreds of people had expressed interest in adopting the newborn. Her parents, four brothers, and an aunt died under the rubble. An aunt and uncle have adopted a newborn born amid the wreckage of a collapsed building in Syria, the only member of her immediate family … Read more

New deadly earthquakes in Turkey trapped people under rubble

Turkey
  • Tremors 6.4 and 5.8 struck the southeast near the Syrian border.
  • Buildings in both countries collapsed on Monday as a result of the shocks.
  • Previous earthquakes in Turkey and Syria killed 46,000 people.

Rescuers are hunting for individuals buried beneath rubble in Turkey once more after two additional earthquakes struck the country, killing at least three people.

Tremors 6.4 and 5.8 struck the southeast near the Syrian border, where major quakes damaged both nations on February 6.

Previous earthquakes in Turkey and Syria killed 46,000 people and displaced tens of thousands more.

Buildings in both countries collapsed on Monday as a result of the shocks.

The 6.4 tremors struck at 20:04 local time (17:04 GMT), followed by the 5.8 quakes three minutes later, according to Turkey’s disaster and emergency department.

Interior Minister Süleyman Soylu said the three deaths occurred in Antakya, Defne, and Samandag, and urged residents not to visit potentially risky buildings.

Mr. Soylu said 213 people had also been injured.

Reports from the city of Antakya spoke of fear and panic in the streets as ambulances and rescue crews tried to reach the worst affected areas where the walls of badly damaged buildings had collapsed.

“I thought the earth was going to split open under my feet,” local resident Muna al-Omar told Reuters news agency, crying as she held her seven-year-old son. She had been in a tent in a park in the city center when the new earthquakes hit.

470 injured persons are alleged to have visited hospitals in Syria following Monday’s quakes, which were also felt in Egypt and Lebanon.

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Blinken urges Nordic nations to join NATO in Turkey visit

Blinken

Antony Blinken expressed support for Sweden and Finland’s quick NATO membership. And promised $100 million in funding to assist impacted populations. According to Blinken, there is no “formal schedule” for approval and delivery. US Secretary of State Antony Blinken emphasized Washington’s strong support for Sweden and Finland’s quick NATO membership. As his Turkish colleague emphasized … Read more

Turkey suspends earthquake relief efforts as Blinken vows additional US assistance

Blinken
  • Rescue efforts following last week’s deadly earthquake have stopped.
  • US Secretary of State Antony Blinken offered $100 million in new humanitarian relief.
  • The end of rescue operations came as Blinken traveled to Turkey.

Turkey said on Sunday that rescue efforts following last week’s deadly earthquake have stopped in all but two districts, as visiting US Secretary of State Antony Blinken offered $100 million in new humanitarian relief.

The 7.8-magnitude earthquake that slammed southeastern Turkey and northern Syria on February 6 killed almost 44,000 people, with the likelihood of finding survivors two weeks out exceedingly remote.

Yunus Sezer, the chief of Turkey’s disaster service, said on Sunday that search and rescue efforts had been completed in all provinces except Hatay and Kahramanmaras, the epicenter of the earthquake.

Sezer stated that search and rescue efforts in the provinces continued on the 14th day, but that the number was likely to decrease by late Sunday.

The agency’s chief also said that Turkey’s death toll had increased to 40,689. The total death toll, including those killed in Syria, is currently 46,377.

Long-term effort

The end of rescue operations came as Blinken traveled to Turkey to express solidarity with a NATO ally and launch a new $100 million humanitarian package.

Washington’s top diplomat met with his Turkish counterpart, Mevlut Cavusoglu, at the Incirlik air base in southern Turkey, where the US has transported help.

Blinken then accompanied Cavusoglu in a helicopter to inspect the disaster’s devastation in Hatay province.

The new aid “will be moving soon. Sadly, it’s less about search and rescue but long-term recovery,” Blinken told reporters.

“This is going to be a long-term effort. It’s going to take a massive effort to rebuild but we’re committed to supporting that effort,” he said.

Washington had now contributed $185 million in assistance to Turkey and Syria, he added.

The trip had been planned before the earthquake, the worst natural disaster to hit Turkey in its post-Ottoman history.

We still have hope

Three dead were recovered from one building in the damaged southeastern city of Antakya, with a woman still believed to be inside, an official briefed on the rescue work told sources on condition of anonymity.

The scent of decaying carcasses and a cloud of dust hovered in the air at the recovery site in the city’s northwest, just off Republic Avenue.

An excavator sorted through the rubble in front of the four-story apartment building, the front of which had been ripped off by the earthquake.

Husseyin Yavuz told sources in Antakya that he had been looking for his cousin’s body under the wreckage for days and that the search should continue.

“We’ve been here since the day of the earthquake. With God’s help, we still have hope,” he said.

Adile Dilmet, sitting next to Yavuz, was on the point of tears as she remembered waiting outside in the cold for more than a week as the authorities barred residents from entering their homes.

However, she told sources that families were also urged to evacuate their homes before the structures were demolished, and she demanded that the dead be recovered first.

“We’re suffering here… What are we going to do?”

Rocky relations

Blinken’s itinerary for his first travel to Turkey since taking office in 2021 includes meetings with authorities managing the delivery of American help and a tour of the Hatay humanitarian operation.

Relations between the United States and Turkey have been tense in recent years, but Washington has considered Ankara as useful in its role as a mediator between Russia and Ukraine since Moscow’s invasion last year.

Blinken will meet with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Ankara on Monday, with two concerns expected to be on the table.

Turkey wishes to purchase F-16 fighter fighters, but the transaction is being stymied in the US Congress due to worries over Turkey’s human rights record and threats to neighboring Greece.

Blinken will also likely bring up Turkey’s refusal to ratify Sweden and Finland’s NATO membership applications.

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Six arrested after 18 people found dead in truck in Bulgaria

Bulgaria

Six Bulgarians have been charged with involuntary manslaughter. Involvement in organized crime, and people smuggling. For the discovery of 18 Afghan migrants and refugees dead in Bulgaria. Within a truck that had been left on a gravel road close to the capital Sofia, 18 Afghan migrants and refugees were discovered dead in Bulgaria. According to … Read more

Turkey earthquake rescue operations to end, says government

Turkey earthquake

The AFAD reports that search and rescue activities have ended in most regions. With the death toll rising to 40,642 and 5,800 deaths in Syria. More than 5,800 deaths in Syria have been documented. About two weeks after this month’s deadly earthquakes in Turkey and Syria, the Turkish Disaster and Emergency Management Administration (AFAD) reports … Read more

Turkey Earthquake, a father and daughter are reunited after days of searching

Turkey
  • They were stuck together when their house collapsed during the earthquake.
  • His wife and son did not survive the ordeal.
  • She was placed in the custody of social services when he was admitted to the hospital.

Adana: Screams first… then piercing cries… The phrase “father, father” is then repeated several times.

Gada Ayyan, 4, and her father, Ahmet Ayyan, are being reunited after being buried in the wreckage of their former home in southern Turkey.

They were stuck together when their house collapsed during the earthquake that killed almost 46,000 people. When Gada was rescued and transferred to the hospital, the two endured an agonizing few days apart.

“When it first started shaking I grabbed my daughter and my whole family began to run out,” Ahmet said. “The building collapsed on top of us all.”

His wife and son did not survive the ordeal. While he was stuck, Ahmet could hear his son’s crying. He was accompanied by his daughter. She was resting on his leg, and they were both locked, unable to escape.

The rubble reached up to his neck. On the fourth day under the rubble, he expressed despair. He was in a lot of agonies. His foot was severely injured. His daughter, on the other hand, would not let him give up hope of being saved.

“My daughter was telling me over and over papa don’t cry. Relax. They are coming to rescue us,” said Ahmet.

She directed his gaze to the light spilling through. And, lo and behold, they heard voices. They were about to be saved.

Gada was the first to be dragged out, scarcely scratched. They dug Ahmet out after about a half hour. Nonetheless, she was placed in the custody of social services when he was admitted to the hospital.

When he lost sight of his daughter, he knew if it was the last thing he ever did, he’d see her again.

He posted her picture on Facebook and Instagram, appealing seeking anyone who could help him find her. A relative eventually discovered that social services had a healthy little girl with no parents.

“She kept me alive.” He said of her constant encouragement for days under the rubble. “That is my little girl. She is my hero. She’s my hero”

They will have to deal with the loss of Gada’s mother and 7-year-old brother, but Ahmet and his daughter have each other to love and care for and that is enough he said.

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Three people rescued alive 13 days after earthquake

earthquake

Rescuers have retrieved three individuals, including a kid. From the rubble of a building in Antakya, Turkey. After 296 hours of being trapped. Thirteen days after a huge earthquake that claimed tens of thousands of lives, Turkish rescuers have retrieved three individuals, including a kid, alive from the rubble, local media reported. After spending 296 … Read more

6,000 babies born in southern Turkey since earthquakes

Turkey

6,447 babies have been born in southern Turkey since twin earthquakes. With 10,489 prenatal observations, 10,489 postpartum follow-ups. And 154,212 vaccine doses given. Since twin earthquakes hit the area earlier this month, about 6,500 babies have been born in southern Turkey, according to the country’s health minister. A total of “6,447 babies have been born … Read more

Germany will not forsake earthquake victims, says Scholz

Germany

Germany is supporting the earthquake victims in Turkey and Syria. Germany will support the earthquake victims, said Olaf Scholz. Olaf Scholz said Germany share their pain and will not leave Turkey. Germany will support the earthquake victims in Turkey and Syria as they deal with the repercussions of the catastrophe, according to German chancellor Olaf … Read more

Death toll in Turkey earthquake surpasses 40,000

Turkey

The death toll in Turkey has risen to 40,642. With over 5,800 people killed in Syria. And over all 46,000 deaths recorded. The death toll in Turkey following the terrible earthquakes on February 6 has grown to 40,642. Death toll reported by Yunus Sezer, the chairman of the nation’s Disaster and Emergency Management Authority (AFAD). … Read more

Turkey is outraged over substandard construction as ‘earthquake-proof’ homes collapse

Turkey
  • Residents believed their homes would be safe in a quake.
  • Government promises to investigate why buildings collapsed.
  • Sector officials say 50% of buildings contravene regulations.

Tenants of a luxury housing complex in southern Turkey believed their flats were ‘earthquake-proof’ until the edifice collapsed like a domino in last week’s terrible earthquake, killing hundreds.

The wreckage of the Ronesans Rezidans, which was billed as “a piece of paradise” when it first opened a decade ago, has now become a source of public outrage.

Survivors wait for word of loved ones by the mound of debris that was the 249-apartment block, as their hopes of survival wane.

“My brother lived here for ten years… It was said to be earthquake safe, but you can see the result,” said 47-year-old jeweller Hamza Alpaslan.

“It was introduced as the most beautiful residence in the world. It’s in horrible condition. There is neither cement nor proper iron in it. It’s a real hell,” he added.

Eleven days after the earthquake that killed over 43,000 people in Turkey and Syria and displaced millions, Turkish indignation is increasing over what they regard as unethical construction methods and severely faulty urban plans.

According to Turkey’s Urbanization Ministry, 84,700 buildings have collapsed or have been seriously damaged.

While the Ronesans Rezidans, or “Renaissance Residence,” had collapsed, numerous older buildings on the street remained standing.

“We rented this place as an elite place, a safe place,” said Sevil Karaabduloglu, whose two daughters are under the rubble.

Missing Ghanaian international footballer Christian Atsu who played for local team Hatayspor is also believed to have lived in the complex.

ERDOGAN’S CONSTRUCTION BOOM

Turkey has committed to investigating the building collapse and has so far interviewed 246 people, including 27 developers, 27 of whom are being detained by police.

“No rubble is cleared without collecting evidence,” said Justice Minister Bekir Bozdag.

“Everyone who had a responsibility in constructing, inspecting, and using the buildings is being evaluated.”

The ruling AK Party of President Tayyip Erdogan has placed a high value on building, which has helped drive growth throughout its two decades in office, though the industry has suffered in the last five years as the economy has faltered.

Opposition parties accused his government of failing to enforce building laws and of misusing special levies levied after the last large earthquake in 1999 to make structures more earthquake resistant.

Turkey fell 47 places in Transparency International’s Corruption Perception Index to 101 in the ten years to 2022, from 54 out of 174 nations in 2012.

Erdogan argues the opposition lies in order to discredit the administration and stymie investment.

A damaged governmental building connected to Turkey’s Urbanisation Ministry lies three kilometers distant from the Renaissance Residence, and locals and activists claim critical records relating to building safety and quality control are scattered amid the wreckage.

Omer Mese, an Istanbul lawyer, said he has been keeping an eye on the ruins and is attempting to salvage what could be essential evidence, despite the fact that some documents have been destroyed as individuals left homeless hunt for anything they can burn for warmth.

“There were a lot of official documents with original signatures. It was essential to save and protect them… so that those responsible for this disaster can be brought to justice,” he said, adding the papers included data on concrete and earthquake resistance tests.

“I read the news about contractors arrested after the earthquake but when we think about this destruction and its extent… there should be more,” he added.

The Urbanisation Ministry said documents would be moved to the ministry archive in the city and were stored digitally.

BUILDING AMNESTY

According to industry officials, over half of Turkey’s total 20 million buildings violate construction rules.

The government implemented a zoning amnesty in 2018 to legalise unregistered construction projects, which engineers and architects warned may jeopardise lives.

Over 10 million people petitioned for amnesty, with 1.8 million petitions accepted. Property owners had to pay to register their structures, which were subsequently subject to a variety of taxes and levies.

The administration stated that it was necessary to eliminate conflicts between the state and residents and to legalise constructions.

“Unfortunately the zoning amnesty in our country is somehow

considered a public blessing,” Mese said.

“We have become a society that lives by considering it a plus to put something off for a day, but we end up being crushed by the consequences of that. That is the problem.”

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  • Turkish rescuers retrieved a 45-year-old man from the rubble on Friday
  • Rescuers were shown on social media cautiously dragging a stretcher.
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Turkey: Turkish rescuers retrieved a 45-year-old man from the rubble on Friday, some 12 days after a massive earthquake killed tens of thousands.

Despite being trapped under the wreckage for so long in frigid conditions, teams have been finding survivors all week, though their numbers have plummeted to just a handful in recent days.

Hakan Yasinoglu, the guy, was rescued 278 hours after the 7.8-magnitude tremor struck Hatay, a southern province near the Syrian border.

Rescuers were shown on social media cautiously dragging a stretcher containing the victim through the wreckage of a destroyed structure.

To avoid a fall, he was fastened to the stretcher and wrapped in a golden thermal jacket.

He was quickly loaded into an ambulance and driven away.

His face was obscured, and unlike earlier late-night rescues, where teams rejoiced or clapped, the attitude on the ground appeared solemn.

Three more individuals, including a 14-year-old kid, were rescued late Thursday and early Friday, with the search at certain locations ongoing around the clock.

On Friday, Turkish Vice President Fuat Oktay indicated that rescue efforts in the region were still ongoing at less than 200 locations.

The earthquake killed around 41,000 people in Turkey and Syria, injured tens of thousands more, and left millions homeless in cold temperatures.

The earthquake hit 11 provinces in Turkey. Rescue activities in three provinces, Adana, Kilis, and Sanliurfa, have been finished, according to Turkish officials.

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