Turkey issues earthquake rebuilding rules after millions left homeless
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[February 24, 2023]
By Timour Azhari and Ezgi Erkoyun
ANTAKYA/ISTANBUL, Turkey (Reuters) - Turkey issued rebuilding
regulations on Friday for a region devastated by earthquakes this month
to enable companies or charities to help in the urgent task of building
new homes for the millions who need rehousing after the devastating
tremors.
More than 160,000 buildings, containing 520,000 apartments, collapsed or
were severely damaged in Turkey in the earthquakes.
The Turkish death toll from the tremors now stands at more than 43,500
people, while the toll in neighbouring Syria, a nation already shattered
by war, is close to 6,000.
Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan has pledged to rebuild homes within a
year, although experts have said the authorities should put safety
before speed. Some buildings that were meant to withstand tremors
crumbled in the latest earthquakes.
Many survivors have left the region of southern Turkey that was hit or
have been settled in tents, container homes and other
government-sponsored accommodation.
Under the new regulations, individuals, institutions and organisations
will be able to build residences and workplaces that they can donate to
the urbanisation ministry and those properties will then be handed to
those in need, according to a presidential decree published in the
Official Gazette.
Justice Minister Bekir Bozdag told CNNTurk that 171 people had been
arrested and 77 more faced detention as part of an investigation into
collapsed buildings in the earthquake area, related to violations of
building codes.
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A man carries a sofa out of a destroyed
apartment building in the aftermath of the deadly earthquake in
Antakya, Hatay province, Turkey, February 20, 2023. REUTERS/Eloisa
Lopez
"Everyone involved will be held accountable in front of courts.
Everyone will be punished according to their responsibility," Bozdag
said.
He said legal changes could be needed for crimes regarding
construction permits and said the authorities should discuss tougher
punishments and deterrents for violating zoning rules, which dictate
where and how buildings can be more safely built.
In Antakya, Saeed Sleiman Ertoglu, 56, loaded up what remained of
his stock from his waterpipe shop that was not damaged in the two
massive earthquakes on Feb. 6 followed by another strong quake two
weeks later.
"The glassware was very beautiful, more than usual, but then we had
this (earthquake), and it all got ruined," he said, after his home
and shop survived the first tremors but not the later one. He
estimated that 5% of his merchandise survived.
"What can we do? This is an act of God, and God’s will always bears
gifts," he said.
(Additional reporting by Mehmet Dinar; Editing by Michael Georgy and
Edmund Blair)
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