Tue, 21-Oct-2025

Turkey earthquake: The children whose names have been wiped

Turkey
  • Children are too young to realize how much they’ve suffered.
  • Children are un-named, either their parents deceased or untraceable.
  • More than 260 injured children in the country’s disaster zone have yet to be identified.

Turkey: The injured children in Adana City Hospital are too young to realize how much they’ve suffered.

I observed medics in the acute care unit bottle-feeding a six-month-old girl whose parents had gone missing.

There are hundreds more unnamed children whose parents are either deceased or untraceable.

The earthquake destroyed their homes and has now erased their names.

Dr. Nursah Keskin grips the hand of the baby girl in intensive care – known only by the tag on her bed: “Anonymous”.

She has multiple fractures, a black eye, and her face is badly bruised, but she turns and smiles at us.

“We know where she was found and how she got here. But we’re trying to find an address. The search is continuing,” says Dr. Keskin, a pediatrician and deputy director at the hospital.

Turkey-Syria earthquake: New-born and mother saved after four days in  rubble - BBC News

Many of these examples involve children rescued from collapsed buildings in other parts of the country. They were sent to Adana because the hospital is still operational.

Many more medical facilities in the disaster area have collapsed or been damaged. Adana was transformed into a rescue hub.

In one transfer, newborn newborns were brought here from a maternity unit in a critically damaged hospital in Iskenderun.

Turkish health experts claim there are already more than 260 injured children in the country’s disaster zone who have yet to be identified.

This figure may grow dramatically when additional locations are addressed and the true extent of homelessness becomes clear.

Dr. Keskin leads me through the crowded corridors. In an emergency area, earthquake survivors lie on trolleys, while others are draped in blankets on mattresses. We make our way to the surgical ward, which is similarly crowded with injured children.

We encounter a girl who the doctor estimate is about five or six years old. She’s dozing off while hooked up to intravenous drips. According to the staff, she has a head injury and several fractures.

I inquire whether she has been able to tell them her name.

“No, it’s only eye contact and gestures,” says Dr. Ilknur Banlicesur, a pediatric surgeon.

Children can’t communicate

“Because of the shock, these children cannot really talk. They know their names. Once they’re stabilized a couple of days later we can [try to] talk,” she explains.

Video shows two children rescued from building rubble after deadly  earthquake in Turkey

Unidentified children have been matched to residences by health officials in Turkey. However, many of the addresses are little more than ruins. Nameless youngsters have already been taken into care in at least 100 situations.

Turkish social media has been flooded with images depicting missing children, detailing which floor they lived on in collapsed buildings, and expressing hope that they were rescued and transported to a hospital.

Surviving family and health ministry officials have been scouring medical facilities for them.

The wounded continue to arrive at the Adana, Turkey hospital. They are both stunned and fatigued.

Everyone here, patients and doctors alike, is a survivor.

Dr. Keskin lost family members in the earthquake and sought refuge in a hospital with her children as aftershocks came.

I inquire as to how she is coping.

“I’m good, I’m trying to be decent, because [the children] truly need us.

“However, I thank God that I still have my children. I can’t imagine anything more painful for a mother than the loss of her child.”

Next to us, young patients in wards await the return of their parents.

Some people have been reunited. However, the rest of the earthquake’s victims remain unidentified.

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Toll from the Turkey-Syria earthquake approaches 24,000, aid is trickling in

Syria

Many are in critical need of assistance. At least 870,000 people in both nations urgently needed food following the earthquake. 5.3 million people are homeless in Syria alone. SYRIA’S BAB-AL-BORDER CROSSING: On Saturday, international help began to arrive in portions of Turkey and Syria, where rescuers worked to remove children from the wreckage in places … Read more

Lionel Messi Donates 3.5 Million Euros to Turkey and Syria

Lionel Messi

Lionel Messi Donates 3.5 Million Euros to Turkey and Syria. Lionel Messi came forward to help people affected by the destruction. Fans are showing their support after Messi’s foundation announced the donation. The famous footballer Lionel Messi, who won the World Cup for Argentina has declared that he will provide the earthquake victims in Turkey … Read more

Turkey tremor raises concerns about construction standards

Turkey

The earthquake killed over 24,000 people. Building quality has deteriorated to the point where structures come apart like paper. 12,141 buildings in Turkey have been destroyed or severely damaged. Turkey: The apartments they worked so hard to save for, decorate, and make comfortable are now a pile of wreckage after a severe earthquake struck Turkey. … Read more

5.3 million Syrians may now be homeless, says UN

Syria

The UN’s refugee agency estimates that up to 5.3m Syrians may have lost their homes. And  has been focusing on distributing shelters. However, it has been difficult to send help to the northwest of Syria due to rebel control. The UN’s refugee agency estimates that up to 5.3 million people in Syria may have lost … Read more

Erdogan claims that earthquake response is not quick

Erdogan

The Turkish government was not satisfied with the speed of its response. Leading to some people plundering marketplaces and attacking businesses. He asserted that the government could swiftly punish the guilty parties. President Tayyip Erdogan was not satisfied with the speed of the response to the devastating earthquakes that struck the country’s south. “So many … Read more

14 aid trucks crossed into northwest Syria, says IOM

Syria

14 trucks bringing humanitarian aid crossed the border from Turkey into northwest Syria. WFP has pleaded for the opening of new corridors between Syria and Turkey. As food supplies are running low and new crossings are needed. 14 trucks bringing humanitarian aid crossed the border from Turkey into northwest Syria, according to the International Organization … Read more

Death toll in Turkey earthquake crosses 22,000

Turkey earthquake

The death toll from the earthquake in Turkey and Syria crosses 22,000. After 104 hours, a woman was found alive in Turkey’s ruins. Tt least 1,340 people have died in Syria’s government-controlled territories. There have been about 22,000 fatalities as a result of the earthquake that hit Turkey and Syria. The death toll in Turkey, … Read more

Earthquake in Turkey & Syria: Teenage sisters rescued after 101 hours

Earthquake Turkey
  • 101 hours after the earthquake, two teenage sisters were rescued from the rubble.
  • Firefighters said that two adolescent sisters have been saved in Kahramanmaraş city.
  • At least 78,124 were injured and more than 21000 people died in Turkey and Syria.

Firefighters said that two adolescent sisters have been saved in Kahramanmaraş city 101 hours after Turkey was struck by a powerful earthquake.

The Antalya Metropolitan Fire Department announced in a statement on Friday that Fatma, 13, was saved two hours after Ayfer, 15, was rescued from the wreckage in the 99th hour following the earthquake.

According to the statement, rescuers carried out a 10-hour rescue operation after employing seismic sensors to find signs of life under the rubble.

In an effort to keep Ayfer awake, the firefighters talked to her. They promised to fetch her some ice cream once she was outside securely after she mentioned how much she missed eating it.

Additionally, they played the music she wanted.

The firefighters made the roughly 800 km (500 mph) journey from Antalya to Kahramanmaraş to assist in the rescue operations.

A 7.8 magnitude earthquake on early Monday jolted southern Turkiye and northwest Syria, killing people in their sleep, leveling buildings, and causing tremors felt as far away as Greenland, news agencies and Al Jazeera reported.

At least 78,124 were injured and more than 21000 people died in Turkey and Syria.

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Earthquake in Turkey & Syria: Turkish president to visit devastated provinces of Adiyaman and Malatya

Earthquake Turkey
  • The Turkish president will visit the devastated provinces of Adiyaman and Malatya.
  • Recep Tayyip Erdogan is scheduled to examine the earthquake-affected districts.
  • Rescue workers are battling the elements to find survivors under the rubble.

The Turkish president will visit the devastated provinces of Adiyaman and Malatya.

According to Turkish official broadcaster TRT Haber, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is scheduled to examine the earthquake-affected districts in the provinces of Adiyaman and Malatya on Friday.

The provinces are situated north of Gaziantep, the 7.8-magnitude earthquake’s epicenter, and towards the south of the nation.

Rescue workers are battling the elements to find survivors among the rubble of fallen buildings in Turkey and Syria, where more than 21,000 people have died.

According to authorities, there were at least 78,124 injuries across both countries.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Turkey would observe seven days of national mourning for the victims of Monday’s earthquake.

“A national mourning period has been declared for seven days. Our flag will be hoisted at half-mast until sunset on Sunday, February 12, 2023, in all our national and foreign representative offices,” Erdogan said in a tweet.

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Earthquake in Turkey & Syria: A young boy rescued from under rubble using WhatsApp location

Turkey Earthquake
  • Boran Kubat was rescued from under the rubble of an apartment building in eastern Turkey.
  • Rescuers found the family and pulled Boran and his mother from the rubble.
  • According to Boran, it took his pals four to five sledgehammer swings to locate their exact location.

After sharing his location in a video appeal on WhatsApp, a 20-year-old student named Boran Kubat was rescued from under the rubble of an apartment building in eastern Turkey. While visiting family in Malatya, Boran, and his mother, both from Istanbul, were shaken by the twin earthquakes.

The family had returned to the building after surviving the morning’s first earthquake, which caused the structure to collapse in the subsequent quake of 7.5 magnitudes. While trapped with his family beneath the apartment’s debris, Boran realized he could notify friends via social media on his smartphone.

In a video message sent on WhatsApp, Boran begged for assistance and provided their address. He said, “Whoever reads my WhatsApp status, please come and help. Please send help to save us right away. Rescuers found the family and pulled Boran and his mother from the rubble.

According to Boran, it took his pals four to five sledgehammer swings to locate their exact location. This was revealed to Turkish news outlet Anadolu Agency. He further stated that his grandma and uncle were still captive.

Victims trapped in the earthquake-stricken areas of Turkey and Syria have inundated social media with desperate pleas.

A YouTuber by the name of Charmquell aka Firat Yayla was reportedly rescued from Hatay’s downtown Antakya area as a result of posting a video of his address on Instagram stories, according to AlJazeera. Later, he provided an update, mentioning that his mother was still trapped beneath the slab of concrete.

The US announced an initial emergency relief package at $85 million on Thursday. According to Reuters, the death toll reached 20,000 on Thursday, and after more than three days of rescue attempts following the catastrophic seismic occurrences, the prospects for finding additional survivors were dim.

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Earthquake in Turkey & Syria: 16-year-old girl rescued after 80 hours

Earthquake in Turkey
  • They had heard noises coming from the broken walls.
  • Bringing tears to the eyes of her happy father.
  • After neighbours called for help, it took rescuers five agonising hours to save her life.

ANTAKYA: The crucial 72-hour window for locating earthquake survivors in Turkey had long since passed.

But after more than 80 hours, 16-year-old Melda Adtas was discovered still alive, bringing tears to the eyes of her happy father and spurring the grieving nation on to a painfully rare bit of good news following Monday’s 7.8-magnitude tremor.

Over 21,000 people have died in Turkey and Syria, yet the father only felt relieved.

He said, “My dear, my dear!” as the rescuers dragged the teen from the debris and the onlookers cheered.

After neighbours called for help, it took rescuers five agonising hours to save her life.

They had heard noises coming from the broken walls.

Rescuers’ spirits improved when they discovered three survivors in the same structure, just one floor above Melda. They set off to hunt for the missing girl together with her distraught father.

God bless you, I say!

Melda was trapped beneath a fallen wall when rescuers found her.

Suleyman, one of a group of Black Sea miners who travelled south to aid, was in charge of her rescue operation.

His coworkers claimed that without him, the operation would not have been successful. He is adept at navigating dim, constrained areas.

As curious bystanders watched, the rescuers silently dismantled each barrier in order to stay in contact with Melda.

They suddenly arrived to the young girl, who was cold and battered but still alive, and gently transferred her to an ambulance that was already waiting.

Melda was wrapped with a blanket to protect her from the cold and curious glances as several rescuers, wearing helmets, covered in dust, and with worn-out faces held the stretcher.

When the earthquake wreaked havoc, many people who were caught up in the tragedy while they were asleep had almost nothing on.

Many people gave the rescuers hugs, kisses, and congratulations as Melda was placed in the ambulance safely. Many struggled to contain their tears.

One said, “We didn’t work for nothing; we rescued a female out of the wreckage.

Another, fatigued and perplexed by the torturous struggle against time, questioned, “What day is it? ”

Her father yelled, “God bless you all!”

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Earthquake in Turkey & Syria: Thousands of people want to adopt the miracle baby

Earthquake in Turkey Syria
  • Baby Aya is in the hospital.
  • Her condition is now stable.
  • People have been looking for loved ones in the collapsed buildings in Aya’s hometown of Jindayris.

Following Monday’s earthquake in northwest Syria, many of individuals have expressed interest in adopting the newborn girl who was born there.

Baby Aya, whose name in Arabic means “miracle,” was still attached to her mother by the umbilical cord when she was saved.

After the earthquake struck the town of Jindayris, her mother, father, and all four of her siblings perished.

Now, Aya is in the hospital.

Hani Marouf, the paediatrician caring for her, described how poor of a condition she was in when she came on Monday. “She had bumps, bruises, she was cold and barely breathing,” Hani said.

Her condition is now stable.

Social media was flooded with videos of Aya’s rescue. A father was captured on camera rushing away from the wreckage of a collapsed building while carrying a dust-covered baby.

She was hauled to safety by a distant relative, Khalil al-Suwadi, who also carried the infant to Dr. Marouf in the Syrian city of Afrin.

On social media, many of people have now requested information about adopting her.

One lady said, “I would like to adopt her and give her a proper life.”

“I’m ready to take care of and adopt this youngster… if legal procedures allow me to,” a Kuwaiti TV host declared.

Khalid Attiah, the hospital manager, claims to have fielded dozens of calls from people looking to adopt baby Aya from all over the world.

Dr. Attiah, whose daughter is only four months her senior, stated: “Now, I won’t let anyone adopt her. I’m treating her like one of my own until her distant family shows up.”

She is currently being breastfed by his wife alongside their own daughter.

People have been looking for loved ones in the collapsed buildings in Aya’s hometown of Jindayris.

Mohammed al-Adnan, a journalist there, told: “The predicament is disastrous. Under the debris, there are so many individuals. Still, there are some folks we haven’t managed to free.”

He calculated that 90% of the town had been devastated, and the majority of the assistance received so far had been from locals.

Rescuers from the White Helmets group, who have spent more than a decade rescuing victims from the wreckage during the civil conflict in Syria, have been assisting in Jindayris.

Mohammed al-Kamel warned that given how unstable the building is, the rescuers might also become victims.

We just took three bodies out of this debris, and we believe there is still a family within; we’ll keep digging.

Following the earthquake, more than 3,000 deaths have been recorded in Syria.

This number excludes fatalities that occurred in regions of the nation controlled by the opposition.

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Death toll from Turkey-Syria earthquakes reaches 19,863

Turkey-Syria earthquakes

At least 19,863 people have died in earthquakes. With 66,132 additional injuries reported. An additional 1,347 fatalities have been reported in areas of Syria. At least 19,863 people have died as a result of the terrible earthquakes that struck Turkey and Syria, according to authorities. According to Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Thursday, the … Read more

Hundreds of bodies delivered across Turkey-Syrian border

Turkey-Syrian border

The UN assistance convoy of six trucks carrying non-food items. And shelter supplies entered northwest Syria from Turkey on Thursday. Ending a three-day period of no relief. A United Nations assistance convoy of six trucks carrying non-food items (NFI) and shelter supplies entered northwest Syria from Turkey on Thursday through the Bab Al Hawa crossing. … Read more

Death toll across Turkey and Syria crosses 17,500

Turkey

At least 17,543 people have died and 63,794 have been injured. Data indicate 68,952 people have been hurt. 5,158 individuals were injured in total in Syria. At least 17,543 people have died as a result of the terrible earthquake that struck Turkey and Syria, according to authorities. According to Turkish Vice President Fuat Oktay, at … Read more

PM forms committee to streamline relief activities for quake-hit Turkiye, Syria

projects

PM Shehbaz Sharif formed a committee to streamline relief operations The committee will be headed by Planning Minister Ahsan Iqbal He said Turkiye helped Pakistan during the floods of 2010 and 2022 ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has constituted a high-level committee to streamline relief operations for earthquake victims of Turkiye and Syria. The prime … Read more

Almost 30,000 rescued from near earthquake

Turkey Earthquake

Turkey has evacuated 28,044 residents from the epicenter of earthquake. With 23,437 evacuated by air. And 4,607 by road and train. The southern Turkish province of Kahramanmaras, which is close to the epicenter of Monday’s catastrophic earthquake, has at least 28,044 residents who have been evacuated. According to Turkey’s crisis management organization, AFAD, as of … Read more

Earthquake in Turkey & Syria: Body of Australian quake victim found in Turkey

Earthquake
  • The body of an Australian man killed in Monday’s earthquake has been discovered.
  • John was visiting family in the nation.
  • About 50 other Australians and their families were in the quake zone.

According to Linda Scott, a Sydney local councilor, the body of an Australian man killed in Monday’s earthquake has been discovered in Turkey.

Can Pahali, better known as John, was visiting family in the nation and on holiday in the province of Hatay when the earthquake struck, according to sources.

The Foreign Ministry of Australia reported the death of 1 Australian citizen as a result of the earthquake but did not identify the deceased.

“The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade is profoundly saddened by the news that an Australian has died as a result of the Turkiye earthquakes,” the ministry said. “Our consular team, as well as our teams in Turkiye and Lebanon, are working hard to help family members who are worried about their loved ones.”

The ministry said it is supporting around 50 other Australians and their families who were in the quake zone.

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Earthquake in Turkey & Syria: Twitter access is being restored in Turkey

Earthquake in Turkey & Syria
  • Access to Twitter in Turkey has been restored.
  • Users were unable to use the social media site after the tragic earthquake.
  • Twitter access in the country had been banned.

According to network monitoring firm NetBlocks, access to Twitter in Turkey has been restored after users reported being unable to use the social media site following Monday’s tragic earthquake.

 

Earlier on Wednesday, NetBlocks, journalists, and academics claimed that Twitter access in the country had been banned. Some Twitter users requested assistance from Twitter CEO Elon Musk, using his Twitter handle in an apparent attempt to garner his attention.

Musk stated in a tweet on Wednesday that the Turkish government had notified him that the social media platform would no longer be blocked.

According to NetBlocks, traffic filtering has been implemented at the internet service provider level, prohibiting Twitter users from accessing the site.

Its announcement coincided with user reports that Twitter was unreachable throughout the country, and as President Recep Tayyip Erdogan began a tour of the earthquake-ravaged region.

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Earthquake in Turkey & Syria: President Erdogan will visit more quake-hit cities today

Earthquake Turkey
  • Recep Tayyip Erdogan will visit three more locations today.
  • Erdogan will travel to the southern cities which are close to the Syrian border.
  • Earlier the president had acknowledged public concern over the government’s response.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan will visit three more locations hit by Monday’s deadly earthquake in southern Turkey on Thursday, according to official television.

Erdogan will travel to the southern cities of Gaziantep, Osmaniye, and Kilis, which are close to the Syrian border.

Erdogan visited an emergency assistance center set up by Turkey’s disaster management agency near the epicenter in the district of Pazarcik on Wednesday, as well as relief activities in the provinces of Adana, Hatay, and Kahramanmaras.

Erdogan on government’s response: Speaking as he visited several disaster zones Wednesday, Erdogan vowed to take “every necessary step” and unite the state and nation so that “we will not leave any citizen unattended.”

Earlier in the day, the president had acknowledged public concern over the government’s response, admitting the state initially “had some problems” at airports and on roads, but insisted the situation was now “under control.”

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Earthquake in Turkey & Syria: Death toll from Turkey-Syria earthquakes exceeded 16,000

Turkey
  • The death toll has risen to at least 16,035.
  • The death toll in Turkey has grown to at least 12,873.
  • Tens of thousands of people have been reported injured.

According to authorities, the death toll from Monday’s terrible earthquake in Turkey and Syria has risen to at least 16,035.

According to the “White Helmets” civil defense group, the total number of casualties across Syria is at least 3,162, including 1,900 in rebel-held territories in the northwest. According to Syrian official media, 1,262 people have died in government-controlled areas of the country.

The death toll in Turkey has grown to at least 12,873, according to Turkey’s Disaster and Emergency Management Agency (AFAD) on Thursday.

Aid groups have warned that the death toll is expected to grow dramatically, particularly in Syria, as search and rescue crews wade through the rubble of thousands of fallen buildings in subzero temperatures, with the risk of aftershocks.

Tens of thousands of people have been reported injured across the region, according to official

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Earthquake in Turkey & Syria: Turkish fiancée mourn the loss of bride that never will be

Turkey
  • The earthquake killed more than 15,000 people in southern Turkey and Syria.
  • Yunus Emre Kaya and his fiancee Gulcin were planning their wedding.
  • Fiancee Gulcin was only 19 years old.

KAHRAMANMARAS, Turkey: Yunus Emre Kaya and his fiancee Gulcin were planning a future together when the catastrophic earthquake struck on Monday.

Kaya said his final goodbye to his fiancee two days later, unzipping a black bodybag to identify her body in a sports hall where casualties from the disaster had been laid out. He kissed her goodbye.

They planned to marry in April.

“I was planning to clothe her with a wedding dress but now I will clothe her with a funeral shroud,” he said, weeping on the floor of the sports hall in Kahramanmaras, near the epicenter of the quake which killed more than 15,000 people in southern Turkey and Syria.

The 24-year-old textile worker, who met Gulcin three years ago after completing military service when she was only 16, claimed her death had left him numb.

“Imagine somebody tied your hands and feet and you cannot get up. There is no food, no water, no air,” he said. “This is how I am. I am like the walking dead.”

Kaya was asleep at home when the earthquake occurred, “like an explosion,” shortly after 4 a.m. on Monday. He dragged his mother out into the street before sprinting for 10 minutes to Gulcin’s house.
He discovered her house in ruins. There were people in the rubble, as well as shouts from those trapped beneath it. He eventually discovered that Gulcin and her sister had also perished.

The couple had intended to marry last September but put the date out due to her father’s absence.

“She was saying: ‘Emre, I have

a feeling we won’t be able to do the wedding this time either’ and she was feeling sad,” he said. “It seems like she felt what would happen.”

Kaya said his only hope was that neither Gulcin nor her sister suffered.

“And I just kiss them on the forehead. I opened (the body bag) and kissed her face. There is nothing else that smells this good. There is no other smell as beautiful as this.”

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Jennifer Lopez speaks about earthquake in Turkey and Syria

jennifer lopez

Jennifer Lopez speaks about earthquake in Turkey and Syria. Appealing her million fans to help out the earthquake victims. Actress send prayers and support through posting on social media platform. Jennifer Lopez urged her countless supporters to provide a helping hand to those affected by the tragic earthquakes in Turkey and Syria. “To my JLovers … Read more

King Charles fails to send message to Syria after earthquake

King Charles

King Charles wrote to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Charles express his condolences for the devastating earthquakes in Turkey. Charles failed to deliver the letter to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. Following Monday’s tragic earthquake, King Charles wrote to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. The king was chastised for failing to deliver the letter to Syrian … Read more

Earthquake in Turkey & Syria: Musk says Turkey will re-enable full Twitter access ‘shortly’

Turkey
  • Twitter access had been banned two days after a huge earthquake.
  • The filtering is applied on major internet providers and comes as the public comes to rely on the service in the aftermath.
  • Twitter has been informed by the Turkish government that access will be re-enabled shortly.

Twitter Chief Executive Elon Musk said in a tweet on Wednesday that the firm had been informed by the government of Turkey that full access to the social media platform in the nation will be re-enabled “shortly”.

The Netblocks internet observatory, which monitors connectivity throughout the world, said earlier on Wednesday that Twitter access had been banned two days after a huge earthquake in southern Turkey and northern Syria killed thousands.

“Twitter has been informed by the Turkish government that access will be re-enabled shortly,” Musk tweeted, without providing further details on timing.

Netblocks reported earlier that, “Real-time network data show Twitter has been restricted in Turkey; the filtering is applied on major internet providers and comes as the public comes to rely on the service in the aftermath of a series of deadly earthquakes.”

Since the earthquake, Turkish residents have taken to Twitter to share information about loved ones who are unable to reach them, news of collapsed structures in the vicinity, and aid coordination.

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Earthquake in Turkey & Syria: Turkey leader acknowledges earthquake relief problems

Turkey
  • Tayyip Erdogan admitted that the response to a deadly earthquake in southern Turkey had flaws.
  • The death toll in Turkey and neighboring Syria surpassed 15,000 people.
  • Rescuers are still locating some survivors.

Turkey: President Tayyip Erdogan said on Wednesday that his government’s first response to a deadly earthquake in southern Turkey had flaws, amid outrage from those left homeless and disappointed by the sluggish arrival of rescue crews.

Erdogan, who is running for re-election in May, said on a visit to the disaster area that operations had resumed smoothly and that no one would be left homeless, as the combined recorded death toll in Turkey and neighboring Syria surpassed 15,000 people.

People sought temporary shelter and food in frigid winter weather over a region of southern Turkey and waited in agony by piles of rubble where family and friends might still be buried.

Rescuers were still locating some survivors. However, many Turks have complained about a lack of equipment, knowledge, and support to rescue individuals who are trapped, even when they can hear pleas for aid.

“Where is the state? Where have they been for two days? We are begging them. Let us do it, we can get them out,” Sabiha Alinak said near a snow-covered collapsed building in the city of Malatya where her young relatives were trapped.

Similar pictures and concerns were reported in neighboring Syria, whose north was severely damaged by Monday’s massive earthquake.

Syria’s ambassador to the United Nations admitted the government had a “lack of capabilities and lack of equipment,” blaming more than a decade of civil war in his country and Western sanctions.

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Earthquake in Turkey & Syria: The death toll from the earthquake rises as search teams battle harsh conditions

Earthquake
  • The death toll rose to more than 15,000 people.
  • The earthquake could affect up to 23 million people.
  • The death toll in Syria remained remarkably stable.

The death toll from Monday’s devastating earthquake in Turkey and Syria has risen to more than 15,000 people, owing primarily to an increase in the number for Turkey. The death toll in Syria remained remarkably stable, despite relief organizations’ warnings that the figure would most certainly be far higher.

The World Health Organization estimates that the earthquake could affect up to 23 million people in both countries.

Search and rescue efforts are still underway, aided by relief organizations and countries that have dispatched teams to the worst-affected areas, but they face difficult conditions due to thousands of collapsed structures and frigid weather.

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