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.
ℹ️ Update: Metrics confirm access to Twitter is being restored in #Turkey following hours of filtering. The restoration comes after authorities held a meeting with Twitter to “remind Twitter of its obligations” on content takedowns and disinformation.
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.
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.”
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
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.”
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
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.
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.
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.
The death toll from the earthquakes has reached 11,700. With 2,662 more people killed in Syria. Rescue teams are still looking for people. The death toll in Turkey from the earthquakes on Monday, according to President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, is now at least 9,057. Rescue teams are still looking for people who may be buried … Read more
Aid organizations have been unable to reach the rebel-held province of Idlib. Due to a lack of supplies, leading to a potential catastrophe. Aid from the US and Europe may be too late. With the exception of a “Egyptian technical team,” activist Ahmed Abu Hamza informed Al-Yaum, no supplies have reached the rebel-held province of … Read more
The government’s response to the earthquakes has drawn criticism. The French satirical magazine cartoon has been criticized’. For making light of the catastrophe. The government’s response to devastating earthquakes that have killed more than 11,000 people in southern Turkey and northwest Syria has drawn criticism, according to Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan. “This is a time … Read more
At least 9,057 people have died in Turkey’s earthquakes. And 2,530 have died in Syria, bringing the overall death toll to 11,500. Rescue teams are still looking for more people. At least 9,057 people have died as a result of the earthquakes that struck Turkey on Monday, according to President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Even though … Read more
He said the first 72 hours on the ground were focused on saving as many lives as possible. But there is a shortage of body bags due to the number of bodies. Family members are examining the faces of the deceased and waiting for assistance. To assist with the humanitarian effort, Salah Aboulgasem claimed a … Read more
The Turkish government has opened 77 field hospitals in ten provinces. Providing emergency health services and transferring victims. With risky health conditions by helicopters. The Turkish government has opened 77 field hospitals in the ten provinces that were affected by the earthquake on Monday. Given that rescue operations in Turkey and Syria are being hampered … Read more
The Syrian government is calling for the lifting of economic sanctions. Relief organizations operating in Syria’s areas under government control. The sanctions were placed on Syria in an effort to compel the government. In the wake of Monday’s earthquake, the Syrian regime has increased its calls for the lifting of economic US and EU sanctions. … Read more
More than 11.000 people have died as a result of the terrible earthquake. At least 8,574 people have died in Turkey. At least 2,530 people have died in Syria. At least 11,104 people have died as a result of the terrible earthquake that struck Turkey and Syria, according to authorities. At least 8,574 people have … Read more
Turkey will rebuild Karamanmaras in one year. And donate 10,000 Turkish liras to aid affected families. The search for survivors has become more challenging as a cold front sweeps. The southern province of Karamanmaras, which was the epicenter of Monday’s tragic earthquake, will to be rebuilt, according to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, “in one … Read more
Charles Camilla have expressed their condolences to Turkey. King and Queen Consort expressed their thoughts for those affected. Rescuers in Turkey faced freezing cold as they searched for survivors. King Charles and Queen Consort Camilla have sent a message to the people of Turkey in the aftermath of Monday’s devastating earthquake. The king wrote to … Read more
At least 1,220 people have died in Idlib governorate, a rebel-controlled area in northern Syria.
The hope of finding more families decreases with each hour.
Earthquake: Two children were rescued more than 36 hours after the quake trapped their family as they slept in the wreckage of their home in northern Syria.
“Get me out of here, I’ll do anything for you,” the older child whispers to rescuers who are seen on video squatting in the rubble of the children’s home in Besnaya-Bseineh, a small village in Haram, Syria.
“I’ll be your servant,” she adds, as a rescuer replies, “No, no.”
The girl’s name is Mariam, and she softly touches the hair on her younger sibling’s head as they lie squeezed together in what could be the remains of their bed. She can move her arm enough to shield her sibling’s face from the dust.
According to their father, the younger child’s name is Ilaaf, which means “protection” in Islamic.
Mustafa Zuhir Al-Sayed claims his wife and three children were sleeping in the early hours of Monday when the earth shook with a 7.8-magnitude earthquake, the most powerful to strike the region in more than a century of records.
“We felt the ground shaking … and rubble began falling over our head, and we stayed two days under the rubble,” he said. “We went through, a feeling, a feeling I hope no one has to feel.”
Pinned under rubble, Al-Sayed said his family recited the Quran and prayed out loud that someone would find them.
“People heard us, and we were rescued – me, my wife, and the children. Thank God, we are all alive and we thank those who rescued us,” he said.
The video shows locals cheering as Mariam and Ilaaf are carried from the rubble wrapped in blankets. The children were taken to the hospital, where they’re receiving medical care.
Hope of finding more families decreases with each hour amid frigid temperatures that have made survival difficult even for those who have managed to flee the crumbling structures.
According to the Syrian Civil Defense, a humanitarian aid group better known as the “White Helmets,” at least 1,220 people have died in Idlib governorate, a rebel-controlled area in northern Syria.
The group said Tuesday that the number of dead and injured is “expected to rise significantly due to the presence of hundreds of families under the rubble.”
At least 1,280 deaths have been confirmed in government-controlled areas of Syria, according to state-run media, bringing the total Syrian toll to more than 2,500.
The total number of deaths from the earthquake across the Turkey-Syria border has risen to more than 9,400, with humanitarian groups warning that the figure is likely to grow further.
Aid is slowly reaching people in need, but even before the earthquake, the United Nations estimated that 70% of Syria’s population required humanitarian assistance.
The hope of finding more families decreases with each hour amid frigid temperatures that have made survival difficult even for those who have managed to flee the crumbling structures.
According to the Syrian Civil Defense, a humanitarian aid group better known as the “White Helmets,” at least 1,220 people have died in Idlib governorate, a rebel-controlled area in northern Syria.
Frustration is rising as a result of the slow arrival of assistance.
ANKARA, TURKEY — Heartbreaking images of a newborn pulled alive from the wreckage and a distraught father clutching his dead daughter’s hand have shown the human cost of the earthquake in Syria and Turkey, which had claimed over 9,600 lives by Wednesday.
An improvised army of rescuers has labored in cold temperatures for two days and nights since the 7.8 magnitude quake to find individuals still entombed under the wreckage in various cities on either side of the border.
The official death toll from the disaster is now 7,100 in Turkey and 2,547 in Syria, bringing the total to 9,647 — However, if experts’ greatest predictions come true, that figure may more than treble.
Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the head of the World Health Organization, has cautioned that time is running out for the thousands of people who have been harmed and others who are still believed to be trapped.
It is now too late for Mesut Hancer, a resident of the Turkish city Kahramanmaras, which lies close to the epicenter.
He sat on the icy rubble, unable to speak, clutching his 15-year-old daughter Irmak’s hand while her body lay lifeless among the slabs of concrete and twisted rebar.
‘Children are freezing’
Even for those who have survived, the future is bleak.
Many people have sought shelter from the constant earthquakes, cold rain, and snow in mosques, schools, and even bus shelters, burning rubbish to stay warm.
Frustration is rising as a result of the slow arrival of assistance.
“I’m unable to bring my brother back from the wreckage. I’m unable to reclaim my nephew. Take a look around. For God’s sake, there is no state official here “In Kahramanmaras, Ali Sagiroglu stated.
“For two days we haven´t seen the state around here… Children are freezing from the cold,” he said.
Shops were closed in adjacent Gaziantep, there was no heat since gas lines had been shut to avoid explosions, and getting petrol was difficult.
Sixty-one-year-old homeowner Celal Deniz said the police had to intervene as restless crowds waiting for rescue teams “revolted”.
Another 100 people slept wrapped in blankets in the lounge of an airport terminal traditionally reserved for Turkish politicians and celebrities.
“We saw the buildings collapse, so we know we’re lucky to be alive,” said Zahide Sutcu, who was driving her two tiny children to the airport.
“But now our lives have so much uncertainty. How will I look after these children?”
A decade of civil conflict and Syrian-Russian aerial bombardment had already damaged hospitals, ruined the economy, and caused energy, gasoline, and water shortages in northern Syria.
Even the thrill of rescuing a newborn baby was tinged with grief in the rebel-controlled hamlet of Jindayris.
She was still bound to her mother, who had been slain in the accident.
Recep Tayyip Erdogan reached the area most affected by the earthquake.
Many people have voiced outrage at the government’s apparent lack of response.
People on social media said that the government’s reaction had severe flaws.
According to press reports, Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has traveled to the area most affected by the earthquake. He plans to travel to Kahramanmaras, Hatay, and Pazarcik, the epicenter of the earthquake.
Many people have voiced outrage at the government’s apparent lack of response, with some saying that assistance has yet to arrive.
Arzu Dedeoglu, a woman from the Numune area of Iskenderun in southern Turkey, informed sources Friday night that her two nieces were trapped under the rubble and that no help had arrived for a day.
“We have two kids under the rubble, Aysegul, and Ilayda. They are gone now, I am sure they are already gone. Why couldn’t they have come earlier?”
Another survivor in the southern city of Antakya, Melek, 64, asked: “Where are the tents, where are food trucks?”
According to sources, she stated on Wednesday: “Unlike prior crises in our country, we haven’t seen any food distribution here. We escaped the earthquake, but we will perish here from hunger or cold.”
Others on social media said that the government’s reaction had severe flaws, with some stating that some of the hardest devastated areas had been overlooked.
Damage roads and other infrastructure in southern Turkey have slowed the delivery of supplies to northern Syria.
The northeast of Syria is largely controlled by US-backed Kurdish-led militias.
Syrian Arab Red Crescent head called for the European Union to lift its sanctions on Syria.
BEIRUT, — Even before Monday’s deadly earthquake, delivering relief to all sections of war-torn Syria had formidable political and logistical obstacles.
These obstacles have only grown in the aftermath of the calamity that has killed hundreds in Turkey and Syria and destroyed thousands of structures.
Damage to roads and other infrastructure in southern Turkey has slowed the delivery of supplies to northern Syria, which has already been decimated by 12 years of conflict.
The “conflict and the way the humanitarian response is split between rebel areas and Damascus” complicate aid distribution, according to Aron Lund, a Syria researcher at the New York-based think tank Century International.
While the government in Damascus controls the bulk of Syria, the majority of the north is controlled by several — and sometimes opposing — organizations. The northwest is divided between territory de facto controlled by Turkey and territory controlled by Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, an al-Qaida-linked rebel force. The northeast of Syria is largely controlled by US-backed Kurdish-led militias.
Because of the difficulty of passing via Damascus, foreign aid has been delivered to northwestern Idlib province via Turkey for many years. However, the area of southern Turkey that has traditionally been used as a staging area has been severely damaged by the earthquake.
Aid delivery into northwestern Syria was “temporarily interrupted” Tuesday, according to a United Nations spokesperson, due to infrastructure damage and challenges with road access.
Damage to the Hatay airport and the road to the aid crossing, Bab al-Hawa, were particularly slowing shipments, according to Emma Beals, a nonresident fellow at the Middle East Institute in Washington.
Enormous needs in Turkey itself
“There is also the fact that there are enormous needs in Turkey itself,” she said.
One cause for hold-ups is that the U.N. mandate for delivering aid to the territory only allows it to enter through the Bab al-Hawa crossing, Beals said. Also, international search teams may be reluctant to enter earthquake-affected areas controlled by HTS, which is designated as a terrorist organization by the U.S.
The group’s “presence limits the kinds of aid many donors are prepared to supply to the area,” she said.
The Damascus regime and its Russian allies have seized the opportunity to revive their demand for northern aid to be funneled through Damascus. Countries opposed to Assad do not trust Syrian authorities to provide help to opposition areas and are concerned that it may be redirected to benefit people and institutions associated with the government.
According to Natasha Hall, a senior scholar at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, transporting aid via Damascus to the north is not feasible in practice, especially during a moment of crisis.
“It is extremely logistically and administratively difficult to get the approvals (from Damascus),” she said. Coordination of aid is also hampered “because the government of Syria doesn’t recognize the non-governmental organizations working in northwest Syria.”
At a press conference Tuesday in Damascus, Syrian Arab Red Crescent head Khaled Hboubati said his group is “ready to deliver relief aid to all regions of Syria, including areas not under government control.” He called for the European Union to lift its sanctions on Syria in light of the massive destruction caused by the earthquake.
Aid convoys and rescuers from several countries, notably key ally Russia, as well as the United Arab Emirates, Iraq, Iran, and Algeria, have landed in airports in government-held Syria.
Difficult humanitarian situation
Still, the sanctions exacerbate the “difficult humanitarian situation,” Hboubati said.
“There is no fuel even to send (aid and rescue) convoys, and this is because of the blockade and sanctions,” he said.
Rescue teams search through the wreckage of collapsed buildings in Aleppo, Syria, Tuesday, Feb. 7, 2023. Rescuers raced Tuesday to find survivors in the rubble of thousands of buildings brought down by a powerful earthquake and multiple aftershocks that struck eastern Turkey and neighboring Syria. (AP Photo/Omar Sanadiki)
So far, the U.S. and its allies have resisted attempts at creating a political opening by way of the disaster response. U.S. State Department spokesman Ned Price told reporters Monday that it would be “ironic, if not even counterproductive, for us to reach out to a government that has brutalized its people over the course of a dozen years now.”
Price said the U.S. would continue to provide aid through “humanitarian partners on the ground.”
Similarly, a spokesperson for the United Kingdom’s Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office said the “sanctions regime was put in place in response to human rights violations and other abuses by the regime and their cronies.”
According to a US State Department official, humanitarian assistance in government-held areas is provided by partner organisations rather than the government.
“Our partners in regime-controlled areas directly deliver assistance to beneficiaries without control or direction from the Assad regime,” they told sources. “This is to ensure that our assistance is not diverted by malign actors or the Assad regime and reaches the intended beneficiaries.”
One of the main groups supported by the United States and Britain is a civil defense organization in opposition-held areas known as the White Helmets; USAID Administrator Samantha Power spoke with the group’s head Tuesday and “discussed how USAID can provide the most urgently needed assistance in response to the earthquake,” her office said in a statement.
European Commission
According to European Commission spokeswoman Balazs Ujvari, the European Union has supplied relief in all areas of Syria through UN and NGO partners and is attempting to expand funds for humanitarian assistance. According to him, the Syrian government has not yet formally requested that Europe deploy rescue and medical personnel.
In theory, sanctions should not impede assistance operations in government territories because both the US and the EU have exemptions for humanitarian relief.
However, the reality on the ground can vary. Banks, for example, may restrict transactions to pay suppliers or local workers for humanitarian organizations, despite the exclusions, according to Lund.
In addition, US sanctions, and to a lesser extent EU sanctions, seek to hinder the restoration of damaged infrastructure and property in government-held areas in the absence of a political solution, which could impede post-earthquake rehabilitation, according to Lund.
Meanwhile, local emergency workers in both sections of Syria report that only limited relief is reaching them.
“There are promises that aid will get to us but nothing has gotten here yet,” said the White Helmets’ head Raed Saleh.
Her mother went into labor soon after the accident and gave birth before dying.
Her father, four brothers, and an aunt were also killed.
A doctor at a local Afrin hospital stated she was currently in stable condition.
Syria: Rescuers rescued a newborn baby from beneath the wreckage of a building in northwestern Syria that was demolished by an earthquake on Monday.
According to a relative, her mother went into labor soon after the accident and gave birth before dying. Her father, four brothers, and an aunt were also killed.
After being rescued from the wreckage in Jindayris, a guy was seen carrying the baby, who was covered in dust.
A doctor at a local Afrin hospital stated she was currently in stable condition.
The structure where her family lived was allegedly one of roughly 50 that was demolished by a 7.8-magnitude earthquake in Jindayris, an opposition-held town in Idlib province near the Turkish border.
A baby girl has been rescued from beneath the wreckage of a building in northwestern Syria that was demolished by an earthquake on Monday.
A 7.8-magnitude earthquake allegedly demolished over 50 buildings in Jindayris, an opposition-held town in Idlib province near the Turkish border.
Even before the earthquake, 4.1 million people in the northwest, most of whom were women and children, were in desperate need of humanitarian assistance.
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A plane carrying four search dogs, equipment, and a crew of 77 UK search and rescue experts. Plane landed in Gaziantep to help find survivors buried under the earthquake debris. A medical emergency team was also on board, A plane carrying four search dogs, equipment, and a crew of 77 UK search and rescue experts … Read more
The total number of fatalities from the two powerful earthquakes has surpassed 7,200. With more than 1,800 deaths in Syria and 5,400 in Turkey. King Charles III expressed his sympathy to those affected. The total number of fatalities from the two powerful earthquakes has surpassed 7,200, according to government statistics. According to the authorities, the … Read more
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