'A crane, for God's sake': Inside the struggles of Turkey's earthquake
response
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[February 13, 2023]
ANTAKYA/ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Kevser said she could hear
her two sons trapped beneath the rubble of their collapsed apartment
building in the Turkish city of Antakya but for two days she was unable
to find an emergency response leader to order their rescue.
"Everyone's saying they're not in charge. We can't find who's in
charge," she said on Tuesday last week, standing on a downtown street
where at least a dozen other buildings had collapsed. "I've been begging
and begging for just one crane to lift the concrete."
"Time's running out. A crane, for God's sake."
When Reuters returned to the street a day later, neighbours said no more
survivors had been pulled from the wreckage of the building.
Many in Turkey say more people could have survived the 7.8 magnitude
earthquake that struck the south of the country and neighboring Syria a
week ago if the emergency response had been faster and better organized.
Reuters spoke to dozens of residents and overwhelmed first-responders
who expressed bewilderment at a lack of water, food, medicine, body bags
and cranes in the disaster zone in the days following the quake -
leaving hundreds of thousands of people to fend for themselves in the
depths of winter.
The death toll from both countries on Sunday exceeded 33,000, making it
among the world's worst natural disasters this century and Turkey's
deadliest earthquake since 1939.
"The general problem here is of organization, especially in the field of
health," Onur Naci Karahanci, a doctor working in Turkey's southeastern
city of Adiyaman, said on a call hosted by the Turkish Medical
Association (TTB), the professional grouping for doctors. He said there
weren't enough body bags for the dead, especially in the first two days
after the quake.
In the cities of Antakya and Kahramanmaras, close to the epicentre of
the quake, Reuters reporters saw very few rescue teams in the first 48
hours.
Some survivors said they had tried unsuccesfully to contact Turkey's
Disaster and Emergency Management Authority (AFAD) and ended up begging
local teams to rescue their relatives from the wreckage - only to be
told that such requests must go through AFAD's coordination centres,
Reuters witnesses said.
Asked about the rescue efforts, AFAD's press department directed the
news agency to the interior ministry, saying its teams were busy in the
field. The interior ministry did not immediately respond to a request
for comment.
AFAD has been tasked since 2009 with coordinating disaster response and
aid efforts in Turkey by its 7,300 personnel and more than 600,000
volunteers, as well as by other Turkish and foreign groups. [L8N34O2W1]
AFAD said on Saturday in its regular public briefing that more than
218,000 AFAD responders, police, gendarmerie, soldiers, volunteers and
other personnel were now deployed in the quake zone.
However, AFAD's top officials have not publicly addressed some
residents' criticism of its slow response.
Two experts consulted by Reuters partly blamed the delays on the
centralisation of emergency response under AFAD by President Tayyip
Erdogan's government.
This included restricting the military's freedom to deploy its troops
without direct instruction from civilian authorities, and sidelining of
other first-responders, such as the Red Crescent and the AKUT search and
rescue group, they said.
Hetav Rojan, a Copenhagen-based security advisor for Danish authorities
and expert on the region, said Turkey's politics and governance has
"gravitated towards centralisation" under the ruling AK Party.
"But centralisation is bad in disaster management," he said. "Top-down
implementation stymies response effectiveness. Local units should be
mandated to act according to local needs. This is not happening in
Turkey."
Erdogan's office did not respond to requests for comment. A senior
official who requested anonymity said authorities could have been better
prepared by storing more first aid, medicines and blankets in warehouses
in a region known to be earthquake prone.
The president - facing tight elections this year after two decades in
power - acknowledged last week the search-and-rescue response was not as
fast as the government wanted, partly due to bad weather and damaged
roads that hampered early movements in the vast area spanning 450 km
(280 miles).
Having risen to prominence more than two decades ago partly due to his
critique of the response to a major 1999 earthquake, Erdogan has
rejected criticism of his own administration's response this month.
U.N. aid chief Martin Griffiths, speaking in Kahramanmaras on Saturday,
called Turkey's disaster response "extraordinary" given the quake's
historic size. "In my experience people are always disappointed in the
beginning," he said, in an apparent reference to criticism.
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Cranes remove debris from demolished
buildings following the deadly earthquake in Maras, Turkey, February
11, 2023. REUTERS/Emilie Madi
CRITICAL REPORT
Some opposition politicians have increasingly pointed the finger at
AFAD's lack of preparation.
A report by AFAD into its response to a much smaller 5.9 magnitude
tremor in northwest Turkey in November, reviewed by Reuters,
acknowledged that its vehicles and resources were insufficient to
address a larger disaster. The tremor injured 98 people but caused
no deaths.
The report found that AFAD struggled to find suitable people to
respond to the Nov. 23 quake and its local coordination was poor as
administrators were not fully informed of the emergency plan. An
improvised team of 300 teachers and imams lacked expertise and made
mistakes assessing the damage.
"Disaster groups were unprepared, AFAD centres were selected
wrongly, and there was insufficient coordination and cooperation
between institutions," the report said. It noted that more drills
were needed to prepare for disasters.
Referring to the report, Kemal Kilcdaroglu, leader of the main
opposition party, said that even more damaging than the magnitude of
last week's quake was the "lack of coordination, lack of planning
and incompetence".
The interior ministry did not respond to a request for comment on
what steps were taken in the wake of the report.
Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu said he commissioned the report
precisely to improve Turkey's disaster response.
"Exploiting this matter, creating a political benefit from this
creates more damage than that generated by the earthquake," he said
on Friday.
AFAD's budget for 2023 was cut by a third to 8.08 billion lira ($429
million), down from 12.16 billion lira in 2022. However, the budgets
of the bodies it helps coordinate, including the police and coast
guard, were boosted.
MILITARY'S ROLE
Following a failed coup in 2016, Erdogan tightened his grip on
economic, foreign and defence policy. The government arrested
thousands of people and expelled tens of thousands more from state
jobs for alleged links to the Gulen movement it accused of
orchestrating the coup.
Until 2018, AFAD fell under the prime minister's office. But then,
when Turkey shifted to a centralized presidential system with
Erdogan as head of state, AFAD came under the purview of the
interior ministry that reports to the presidency.
Nasuh Mahruki, founder of the AKUT search and rescue organization,
said the army did not respond soon enough to last week's disaster
because it needed civilian authorisation to mobilize manpower.
In 2010, in an effort to diminish the sway of Turkey's powerful
military, Erdogan's government annulled a protocol that allowed the
army to conduct internal operations under certain conditions without
civilian consent.
"In such colossal events a mass effort altogether is essential,"
Mahruki said. "Now the responsibility seems to be with AFAD, but of
course it is not prepared."
The defence ministry referred questions to the interior ministry.
In a statement, Defence Minister Hulusi Akar said soldiers had
established emergency centres in southern Turkey within an hour of
the quake and their ranks had grown to more than 25,000 by Saturday.
CENTRALIZATION
Turkey is crisscrossed by two major fault lines and Turks are
accustomed to terrifying tremors. But they have generally seen the
state's emergency response as effective.
One nurse, who asked not to be named for fear of being removed from
her relief work, said she was ready to rush to the quake zone on
Monday but had to wait for orders from AFAD and only arrived 40
hours later.
When she arrived in Hatay, the hardest-hit region, she encountered a
field hospital with no water, power or portable toilets - and
located too far from the city of Antakya for many to reach.
She told Reuters she had rushed to every major Turkish disaster in
the last 25 years, including the 1999 tremor that killed more than
17,000 people, but was shocked by the response to last week's
disaster.
"I don't know why AFAD failed so miserably," she said.
(Writing by Jonathan Spicer; Editing by Daniel Flynn)
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