Erdogan visits earthquake-hit south as anger grows over rescue effort
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[February 08, 2023]
By Mehmet Caliskan, Huseyin Hayatsever and Ece Toksabay
KAHRAMANMARAS/ANTAKYA, Turkey (Reuters) -Turkish President Tayyip
Erdogan visited southern Turkey on Wednesday to see first-hand the
destruction wrought by a massive earthquake as anger grew among local
people over what they said was a slow government response to the rescue
and relief effort.
The combined confirmed death toll from Monday's quake, which struck a
swathe of southern Turkey and neighbouring Syria, rose to more than
11,000 people.
The tally was expected to rise as hundreds of collapsed buildings in
many cities have become tombs for people who had been asleep in the
homes when the quake hit in the early morning.
In the Turkish city of Antakya, dozens of bodies, some covered in
blankets and sheets and others in body bags, were lined up on the ground
outside a hospital.
"My wife doesn't speak Turkish, and I can't see very well," said one
man, who did not give his name. "We have to check all the faces. We need
help."
Families in southern Turkey and in Syria spent a second night in the
freezing cold as overwhelmed rescuers tried to pull people from the
rubble.
Many in the Turkish disaster zone had slept in their cars or in the
streets under blankets, fearful of going back into buildings shaken by
the 7.8 magnitude tremor - Turkey's deadliest since 1999 - and by a
second powerful quake hours later.
"Where are the tents, where are food trucks?" said Melek, 64, in
Antakya, saying she had not seen any rescue teams.
"We haven't seen any food distribution here, unlike previous disasters
in our country. We survived the earthquake, but we will die here due to
hunger or cold here."
The death toll rose above 8,500 in Turkey. In Syria, already devastated
by 11 years of war, the confirmed toll climbed to more than 2,500
overnight, according to the Syrian government and a rescue service
operating in the rebel-held northwest.
ELECTION IMPACT
Erdogan, who has declared a state of emergency in 10 provinces and sent
in troops to help, arrived in the city of Kahramanmaras to view the
damage and see the rescue and relief effort.
Speaking to reporters, with constant ambulance sirens in the background,
Erdogan said there had been problems with roads and airports but that
everything would get better by the day.
The disaster poses a new challenge to him in the election he faces in
May that was already set to be the toughest of his two decades in power.
Any perception that the government is failing to address the disaster
properly could hurt Erdogan's prospects in the vote, but analysts say
that on the other hand, he could rally national support around the
crisis response and strengthen his position.
Reuters journalists in Kahramanmaras saw around 50 bodies draped in
blankets on the floor of a sports hall. Family members searched for
relatives among the dead.
Kneeling on the auditorium floor, a woman wailed with grief and embraced
a body wrapped in a blanket
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Volunteers serve meals to people in the
aftermath of an earthquake in Kahramanmaras, Turkey, February 8,
2023. REUTERS/Suhaib Salem TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
In Hatay province, where dozens more bodies lay outside in rows
between Red Crescent tents, people opened body bags hoping to
identify loved ones.
The quake toppled thousands of buildings including hospitals,
schools and apartment blocks, injured tens of thousands, and left
countless people homeless in Turkey and northern Syria.
Turkish authorities say some 13.5 million people were affected in an
area spanning roughly 450 km (280 miles) from Adana in the west to
Diyarbakir in the east.
In Syria, it killed people as far south as Hama.
Turkey's disaster management agency said the number of injured was
above 38,000.
'UNDER THE RUBBLE'
Aid officials voiced particular concern about the situation in
Syria, where humanitarian needs were already greater than at any
point since the eruption of a conflict that has partitioned the
nation and is complicating relief efforts.
Residents in Syrian government-held territory contacted by phone
have described the authorities' response as slow, with some areas
receiving more help than others.
In the town of Jandaris in northern Syria, rescue workers and
residents said dozens of buildings had collapsed.
Standing around the wreckage of what had been a 32-apartment
building, relatives of people who had lived there said they had seen
no one removed alive. A lack of heavy equipment to remove large
concrete slabs was impeding rescue efforts.
Rescue workers have struggled to reach some of the worst-hit areas,
held back by destroyed roads, poor weather and a lack of resources
and heavy equipment. Some areas are without fuel and electricity.
A rescue service operating in insurgent-held northwest Syria said
the number of dead had climbed to more than 1,280 and more than
2,600 were injured.
"The number is expected to rise significantly due to the presence of
hundreds of families under the rubble, more than 50 hours after the
earthquake," the rescue service said on Twitter.
Overnight, the Syrian health minister said the number of dead in
government-held areas rose to 1,250, the state-run al-Ikhbariya news
outlet reported on its Telegram feed. The number of wounded was
2,054, he said.
(Additional reporting by Jonathan Spicer and Ali Kucukgocmen in
Istanbul; Khalil Ashawi in northern Syria; Tom Perry in Beirut;
Writing by Tom Perry and Angus MacSwan; Editing by Robert Birsel and
John Stonestreet)
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