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In Syrian city, 'more are under the rubble than above it'

Turkey-Syria quake toll tops 16,000 as cold compounds misery

Rescuers scramble to get to as many survivors as possible, as 72-hour mark passes; countless people left in uncertainty as relatives trapped under rubble go silent

Local and Israeli rescuers search for people in destroyed buildings in Kahramanmaraş, southern Turkey, February 8, 2023. (Courtesy/Israeli Foreign Ministry)
Local and Israeli rescuers search for people in destroyed buildings in Kahramanmaraş, southern Turkey, February 8, 2023. (Courtesy/Israeli Foreign Ministry)

ANTAKYA, Turkey — Freezing temperatures deepened the misery Thursday for survivors of a massive earthquake in Turkey and Syria that killed more than 16,000 people, as rescuers from more than two dozen countries, including Israel, raced to save countless people still trapped under rubble from collapsed buildings.

The death toll from Monday’s 7.8-magnitude quake is expected to rise sharply as rescue efforts pass the 72-hour mark that disaster experts consider the most likely period to save lives.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Wednesday conceded “shortcomings” after criticism of his government’s response to the earthquake, one of the deadliest this century.

Survivors have been left to scramble for food and shelter — and in some cases watch helplessly as their relatives called out for rescue, and eventually went silent under the debris.

“My nephew, my sister-in-law and my sister-in-law’s sister are in the ruins. They are trapped under the ruins and there is no sign of life,” said Semire Coban, a kindergarten teacher, in Turkey’s Hatay province.

“We can’t reach them. We are trying to talk to them, but they are not responding… We are waiting for help. It has been 48 hours now,” she said.

Still, rescuers kept pulling survivors from the debris as the death toll continued to rise.

Teams sent by the Israel Defense Forces had saved at least eight people, including a 2-year-old boy, by Thursday morning, according to delegation member Doron Ziv. They also included a 65-year-old man who was filmed being pulled from the rubble after 18 hours of rescue efforts and after being trapped for nearly 72 hours.

Speaking with Radio 103FM, Ziv said Thursday that the Israeli delegation was “giving its all” to get to as many survivors as possible quickly, adding that the locals have warmly welcomed and thanked the Israeli teams.

As criticism mounted online, Erdogan visited one of the hardest-hit spots, the quake’s epicenter Kahramanmaras, and acknowledged problems in the response.

“Of course, there are shortcomings. The conditions are clear to see. It’s not possible to be ready for a disaster like this,” he said.

Twitter access returned on Thursday morning after the social network did not work on Turkish mobile networks for several hours Wednesday, according to AFP journalists and the NetBlocks web monitoring group.

Turkish officials had held talks with Twitter leaders after which deputy infrastructure minister Omer Fatih Sayan tweeted Thursday that Turkey expected the social network to cooperate more in the “fight against disinformation.”

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan tours the site of destroyed buildings during his visit to the city of Kahramanmaras in southeast Turkey, two days after the severe earthquake that hit the region on February 8, 2023. (Photo by Adem ALTAN / AFP)

Children saved

Temperatures plunged to minus-five degrees Celsius (23 degrees Fahrenheit) in Gaziantep early Thursday, but the cold did not stop thousands of families from spending the night in cars and makeshift tents, too scared to stay in their homes or prohibited from returning to them.

Parents walked the streets of the southeastern Turkish city — close to the epicenter of the earthquake — carrying their children in blankets because it was warmer than sitting in a tent.

“When we sit down, it is painful, and I fear for anyone who is trapped under the rubble in this,” said Melek Halici, who wrapped her 2-year-old daughter in a blanket as they watched rescuers working late into Wednesday night.

A child looks on as he wears a blanket in a street of Gaziantep, two days after a strong earthquake struck the region, on February 8, 2023. (Photo by Zein Al RIFAI / AFP)

Officials and medics said 12,873 people had died in Turkey and at least 3,162 in neighboring Syria from Monday’s quake, bringing the total to 16,035. Experts fear the number will continue to rise sharply.

In Brussels, the EU is planning a donor conference in March to mobilize international aid for Syria and Turkey.

“We are now racing against the clock to save lives together,” EU chief Ursula von der Leyen said on Twitter. “No one should be left alone when a tragedy like this hits a people.”

‘People dying every second’

Due to the scale of the damage and the lack of help coming to certain areas, survivors said they felt alone in responding to the disaster.

“Even the buildings that haven’t collapsed were severely damaged. There are now more people under the rubble than those above it,” Hassan, who did not provide his full name, said in his rebel-held Syrian town of Jindayris.

A rescue worker digs to reach children under the rubble of a collapsed building in the rebel-held Syria town of Jindayris on February 8, 2023, two days after a deadly earthquake that hit Turkey and Syria. (Photo by Bakr ALKASEM / AFP)

“There are around 400-500 people trapped under each collapsed building, with only 10 people trying to pull them out. And there is no machinery,” he added.

The White Helmets, leading efforts to rescue people buried under rubble in rebel-held areas of Syria, have appealed for international help in their “race against time.”

They have been toiling since the quake to pull survivors out from under the debris of dozens of flattened buildings in northwestern areas of war-torn Syria that remain outside the government’s control.

A leading UN official called for the facilitation of aid access to rebel-held areas in the northwest, warning that relief stocks will soon be depleted.

“Put politics aside and let us do our humanitarian work,” the UN’s resident Syria coordinator El-Mostafa Benlamlih told AFP in an interview.

However, Syria has rejected the notion of receiving aid from Israel, after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said a request for such help had been received by Jerusalem.

Rescue team members search for people in destroyed buildings in Elbistan, southern Turkey, February 8, 2023. (AP/Francisco Seco)

Syria appeals for EU help

The issue of aid to Syria is a delicate one, and the sanctioned government in Damascus made an official plea to the EU for help, the bloc’s commissioner for crisis management Janez Lenarcic said.

A decade of civil war and Syrian-Russian aerial bombardment had already destroyed hospitals, collapsed the economy and prompted electricity, fuel and water shortages.

The European Commission is “encouraging” EU member countries to respond to Syria’s request for medical supplies and food, while monitoring to ensure that any aid “is not diverted” by President Bashar Assad’s government, Lenarcic noted.

Dozens of nations, including the United States, China and the Gulf States have pledged to help, and search teams as well as relief supplies have already arrived.

The EU was swift to dispatch rescue teams to Turkey, but it initially offered only minimal assistance to Syria because of EU sanctions imposed since 2011 on Assad’s government over its brutal crackdown on protesters that spiraled into a civil war.

The Turkey-Syria border is one of the world’s most active earthquake zones.

Monday’s quake was the largest Turkey has seen since 1939, when 33,000 people died in the eastern Erzincan province.

In 1999, a 7.4-magnitude earthquake killed more than 17,000.

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