Turkey, Syria quake survivors at risk of injuries, disease with thousands homeless amid winter

Rescuers in Hatay, Turkey, on Sunday carrying a survivor of the deadly earthquake away from the rubble. PHOTO: REUTERS

ANTAKYA, Turkey – Rescuers pulled a survivor from earthquake rubble on Sunday, six days after one of the worst natural disasters to hit parts of Syria and Turkey, as the death toll exceeded 28,000 and looked set to rise further.

Facing questions over his handling of Turkey’s most devastating earthquake since 1939, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan promised to start rebuilding within weeks, saying hundreds of thousands of buildings were wrecked.

In Syria, the disaster hit hardest in the rebel-held north-west, leaving many homeless for a second time after they were displaced by a decade-old civil war, but the region has received little aid compared with government-held areas.

The European Union’s envoy to Syria urged Damascus not to politicise issues of humanitarian aid, rejecting accusations that the bloc had failed to provide sufficient help to Syrians after last Monday’s magnitude-7.8 quake and major aftershocks.

“It is absolutely unfair to be accused of not providing aid, when actually we have constantly been doing exactly that for over a decade and we are doing so much more even during the earthquake crisis,” Mr Dan Stoenescu told Reuters.

In Turkey’s south-eastern province of Hatay, a Romanian rescue team carried a 35-year-old man named Mustafa down a pile of debris from a building, broadcaster CNN Turk said, about 149 hours after the quake.

“His health is good, he was talking,” said one of the rescuers. “He was saying, ‘Get me out of here quickly, I’ve got claustrophobia’.”

The team placed the man, lying on a stretcher and wrapped in a gold foil blanket, in a waiting ambulance before hugging one another.

‘Looters with knives’

On Saturday, rescue worker Gizem, from the south-eastern province of Sanliurfa, said she had seen looters in the city of Antakya. “We cannot intervene much, as most of the looters carry knives.”

Police and soldiers fanned out to keep order and help with traffic, rescues and food handouts.

Turkey said about 80,000 people were in hospital, with more than one million in temporary shelters.

With basic infrastructure in ruins, survivors feared disease.

“If people don’t die here under the rubble, they’ll die from injuries. If not, they will die from infection,” said Ms Gizem. “There is no toilet here. It is a big problem.”

United Nations aid chief Martin Griffiths described the earthquake as the region’s worst event in 100 years, predicting the death toll would at least double.

He praised Turkey’s response, saying his experience was that disaster victims were always disappointed by early relief efforts.

He said of the death toll in an interview with Sky News on Saturday: “I think it is difficult to estimate precisely as we need to get under the rubble but I’m sure it will double or more. We haven’t really begun to count the number of dead.”

The quake ranks as the world’s seventh-deadliest natural disaster this century, its toll approaching the 31,000 from a quake in neighbouring Iran in 2003.

Officials and medics said 24,617 people were killed in Turkey and 3,574 in Syria. The confirmed total now stands at 28,191.

Remote video URL

The earthquake hit as Mr Erdogan faces a national election scheduled for June. Even before the disaster, his popularity was falling because of soaring inflation and the slumping Turkish lira.

The vote was already seen as Mr Erdogan’s toughest challenge in two decades in power. He has called for solidarity and condemned “negative” politicking.

Some people affected by the quake and opposition politicians have accused the government of slow and inadequate relief efforts early on, and critics have questioned why the army, which played a key role after a 1999 earthquake, was not brought in sooner.

Mr Erdogan has acknowledged problems, such as the challenge of delivering aid despite damaged transport links, but said the situation had been brought under control.

Prosecutors investigating the soundness of buildings that collapsed have ordered the detention or arrest of as many as 95 people, the state-owned Anadolu news agency said.

In Syria’s government-controlled city of Aleppo, World Health Organisation chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus described the disaster as heartbreaking as he supervised some relief distribution and promised more.

Western nations have largely shunned Syrian President Bashar al-Assad during the war that began in 2011. REUTERS

Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.