A powerful
7.8 magnitude earthquake rocked wide swaths of Turkey and neighbouring Syria on
Monday, killing more than 2,500 people and injuring thousands more as it
toppled thousands of buildings and trapped residents under mounds of rubble. Authorities
feared the death toll would keep climbing as rescuers searched through tangles
of metal and concrete for survivors in a region beset by more than a
decade of Syria’s civil war and a refugee crisis.
Residents
jolted out of sleep by the pre-dawn quake rushed outside in the rain and snow
to escape falling debris, while those who were trapped cried for help.
Throughout the day, major aftershocks rattled the region, including a jolt
nearly as strong as the initial quake. After night fell, workers were still
sawing away slabs and pulling out bodies as desperate families waited for news
on trapped loved ones."My grandson is 1 1/2 years old. Please help them,
please. We haven't heard from them or received any information from them since
this morning."Please, they were on the 12th floor," Imran Bahur wept
by her destroyed apartment building in the Turkish city of Adana. Her daughter
and family were still not found.
Tens of
thousands who were left homeless in Turkey and Syria faced a night in the cold.
In Turkey’s Gaziantep, a provincial capital about 33 kilometres (20 miles) from
the epicenter, people took refuge in shopping malls, stadiums, and community
centers. Mosques around the region were opened to provide shelter. The quake,
which was centred in Turkey’s southeastern province of Kahramanmaras, sent
residents of Damascus and Beirut rushing into the street and was felt as far
away as Cairo.
Turkish Vice
President Fuat Oktay said such a disaster could hit "once in a hundred
years." Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said officials do not know
how high the number of dead and injured will rise. The quake piled more misery
on a region that has seen tremendous suffering over the past decade. On the
Syrian side, the area affected is divided between government-held territory and
the country’s last opposition-held enclave, which is surrounded by
Russian-backed government forces. Turkey, meanwhile, is home to millions of
refugees from the civil war.
In the
rebel-held enclave, hundreds of families remained trapped in rubble, the
opposition emergency organization, called the White Helmets, said in a
statement. The area is packed with some 4 million people displaced from other
parts of the country by the war. Many of them live in buildings that are
already wrecked from past bombardments. Strained health facilities quickly
filled with injured people, rescue workers said. Others had to be emptied,
including a maternity hospital, according to the SAMS medical organization.
The region
sits on top of major fault lines and is frequently shaken by earthquakes. Some
18,000 were killed in similarly powerful earthquakes that hit northwest Turkey
in 1999. The U.S. Geological Survey measured Monday’s quake at 7.8, with a
depth of 18 kilometres (11 miles). Hours later, a 7.5 magnitude earthquake
struck more than 100 kilometres (60 miles) away.
The second
jolt in the afternoon caused a multistory apartment building to topple
face-forward onto the street in the Turkish city of Sanliurfa. The structure disintegrated
into rubble and raised a cloud of dust as bystanders screamed, according to
video of the scene.Thousands of buildings were reported to have collapsed in a
wide area extending from Syria’s cities of Aleppo and Hama to Turkey’s
Diyarbakir, more than 330 kilometres (200 miles) to the northeast.
In Turkey
alone, more than 3,700 buildings were destroyed, the authorities said.
Hospitals were damaged, and one collapsed in the Turkish city of Iskenderun. Bitterly
cold temperatures could reduce the time frame that rescuers have to save
trapped survivors, said Dr. Steven Godby, an expert in natural hazards at
Nottingham Trent University. He added that the difficulty of working in areas
beset by civil war would only complicate rescue efforts. Offers of help, from
search-and-rescue teams to medical supplies and money, poured in from dozens of
countries, as well as the European Union and NATO. The vast majority were for
Turkey, with Russian and even an Israeli promise of help to the Syrian
government, but it was not clear if any would go to the devastated rebel-held
pocket in the northwest.
The Syrian
opposition’s Syrian Civil Defense described the situation in the enclave as
"disastrous." The opposition-held area, centred on the province of
Idlib, has been under siege for years, with frequent Russian and government
airstrikes. The territory depends on a flow of aid from nearby Turkey for
everything from food to medical supplies.
At a
hospital in Idlib, Osama Abdel Hamid said most of his neighbours died. He said
their shared four-story building collapsed just as he, his wife, and their
three children ran towards the exit. A wooden door fell on them and acted as a
shield. "God gave me a new lease on life," he said.
In the small,
Syrian rebel-held town of Azmarin in the mountains by the Turkish border, the
bodies of several dead children, wrapped in blankets, were brought to a
hospital.
Television
stations in Turkey aired screens split into four or five, showing live coverage
of rescue efforts in the worst-hit provinces. In the city of Kahramanmaras,
rescuers pulled two children alive from the rubble, and one could be seen lying
on a stretcher on the snowy ground.
In Adana, 20
or so people, some in emergency rescue jackets, used power saws atop the cement
mountain of a collapsed building to saw out space for any survivors to climb
out or be rescued.
"I
don’t have the strength anymore," one survivor could be heard calling out
from beneath the rubble of another building in Adana earlier in the day, as
rescue workers tried to reach him, said a resident, journalism student Muhammet
Fatih Yavuz.
In
Diyarbakir, hundreds of rescue workers and civilians formed lines across a
mountain of wreckage, passing broken concrete pieces, household belongings, and
other debris as they searched for trapped survivors while excavators dug
through the rubble below.
More than
1,600 people were killed in 10 Turkish provinces, with more than 11,000
injured, according to Turkish authorities. The death toll in government-held
areas of Syria climbed to over 539 people, with some 1,300 injured, according
to the Health Ministry. In the country’s rebel-held northwest, groups that
operate there said the death toll was at least 380, with many hundreds injured.
Huseyin
Yayman, a legislator from Turkey’s Hatay province, said several of his family
members were stuck under the rubble of their collapsed homes.
"There
are so many other people who are also trapped," he told HaberTurk
television by telephone. "There are so many buildings that have been
damaged. People are on the streets. It’s raining, it’s winter.
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