Crimes

Turkey earthquake: Death toll hits 21,000 as rescuers search for survivors

More than 21,000 people have been killed in Monday’s earthquakes in Turkey and Syria.

Rescuers are still searching the rubble for survivors, but hopes are fading more than four days since the first quake.

Officials and medics said 18,342 people had died in Turkey and 3,377 in Syria from Monday’s successive earthquakes, bringing the confirmed total to 21,719.

Freezing conditions threaten the lives of thousands of survivors who are now without shelter, water, and food.

Turkish President, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, has called the quakes “the disaster of the century”, acknowledging “shortcomings” after criticism of his government’s response.

On Thursday, the World Bank pledged $1.78bn in aid to Turkey including immediate finance for rebuilding basic infrastructure and to support those affected by the earthquakes.

But the efforts of 100,000 or more rescue personnel on the ground are being hampered by a number of logistical hurdles including vehicle shortages and devastated roads.

UN chief, Antonio Guterres, warned the full extent of the catastrophe was still “unfolding before our eyes”, especially in Syria where a long-running civil war has devastated the country.

On Thursday, the first UN humanitarian aid crossed the border into north-western Syria through Idlib’s Bab al-Hawa crossing.

READ ALSO: Death toll in Turkey, Syria earthquake surpasses 15,000

The crossing is the only way UN aid can reach the region without travelling through areas controlled by Syrian government forces.

Guterres promised more help was on its way and he urged the UN Security Council to allow supplies to be delivered through more than one border crossing.

“This is the moment of unity, it’s not a moment to politicise or to divide but it is obvious that we need massive support,” he said.

A mother of four who fled Aleppo after the quake, Munira Mohammad, told Reuters that they were in desperate need of heating and more supplies, saying: “last night we couldn’t sleep because it was so cold. It is very bad.”

The White Helmets rescue group said the only UN convoy that reached the region did not contain specialised equipment to free people trapped beneath the rubble

“This makes us very disappointed at a time when we are desperate for such equipment to help us save lives from under the rubble,” the group said on Twitter.

The toll (21,719) surpasses the more than 17,000 killed when a similar quake hit northwest Turkey in 1999.

Tens of thousands of people across Turkey and Syria are spending a fourth night taking refuge from bitter temperatures in makeshift shelters having been made homeless by the quakes.

A survivor in south-eastern Turkey, Resat Gozlu, who is now living on the floor of a sports complex with his family, said rescue workers did not arrive until three days after the quake.

He said many remain trapped under the rubble and others died of hypothermia.

“If this continues there could be serious health issues and illness,” he added.

Meanwhile, the World Health Organisation (WHO) warned a second humanitarian disaster will strike unless survivors can get access to shelter, food, water, and medicine “very fast”.

The WHO’s Regional Director for Europe, Dr Hans Kluge, told the BBC the organisation’s staff in Turkey’s Gaziantep have to sleep in cars because “there’s still hundreds and hundreds of aftershocks”.

Kluge said communities in Syria depend on water reservoirs, which were the first to fall. He said the reservoirs need to be replaced or the country faces cholera outbreaks – which he said was an issue before the earthquake.

The Star

Segun Ojo

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