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Turkey-Syria earthquake: Death toll crosses 35,000, recovery 'could take over a generation'

Turkey-Syria earthquake: Death toll crosses 35,000, recovery 'could take over a generation'
The desperate hunt for survivors continues in Turkey and Syria as rights groups warn it could take 'a generation' to completely heal from the devastation.
6 min read
13 February, 2023

Thank you for following our live blog covering the aftermath of the Turkey-Syria earthquake. Please follow our website or our Ìýfor all the latest updates.Ìý

More than 35,000 people have been killed in the devastating earthquake across Turkey and Syria, as aid group World Vision has warned that full recovery could take more than a 'generation'.Ìý

Rescue crews on Monday pulled a 40-year-old woman from the wreckage of a building a week after two powerful earthquakes struck, but reports of rescues are coming less often as the time since the quake reaches the limits of the human body's ability to survive without water, especially in sub-freezing temperatures.

The magnitude 7.8 and 7.5 quakes struck nine hours apart in southeastern Turkey and northern Syria on 6 February.

Officials and medics said 31,643 people had died in Turkey and 3,581 in Syria from last Monday's 7.8-magnitude tremor, bringing the confirmed total to 35,224.

The toll is expected to riseÌýconsiderably as search teams find more bodies, and reduced much of towns and cities inhabited by millions to fragments of concrete and twisted metal.

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On Monday rescuers pulled a 40-year-old woman from the wreckage of a 5-story building in the town of Islahiye, in Gaziantep province. The woman, Sibel Kaya, was rescued after spending 170 hours beneath the rubble by a mixed crew that included members of Turkey’s coalmine rescue team.

Earlier, a 60-year-woman, Erengul Onder, was also pulled out from the rubble in the town of Besni, in Adiyaman province, by teams from the western city of Manisa.

"We received the news of a miracle from Besni which helped put the fire raging in our hearts a little," wrote Manisa’s mayor Cengiz Ergun on Twitter.

Experts however are warning that the likelihood of finding more people alive in the rubble was extremely low, a week since the earthquake struck the region.Ìý

5:52 PM
°®Âþµº Staff

Thank you for following our live blog covering the aftermath of the Turkey-Syria earthquake. Please follow our website or our for all the latest updates. 

4:23 PM
°®Âþµº Staff & Agencies

Children rescued alive from the rubble, more than a week after earthquakes

Two children have been rescued from the rubble following the devastating earthquakes in Turkey and Syria, nearly a week after they struck on 6 February. 

A 10-year-old girl was rescued from the rubble of an apartment block in the southern Turkish province of Kahramanmaras on Monday, 183 hours after a devastating earthquake shook the region, state broadcaster TRT Haber reported.

Earlier in the day, a 13-year-old was pulled out alive from under the rubble of a collapsed building in Turkey's southern Hatay province. The teenager held a rescuer's hand as he was placed on a stretcher, head braced, and covered for warmth, before he was moved into an ambulance.

2:48 PM
°®Âþµº Staff & Agencies

How Syria's war has hindered earthquake relief

Relief efforts in earthquake-affected Syria have been hampered by a civil war that has splintered the country and divided regional and global powers.

Syria has been fractured after 12 years of conflict, and President Bashar al-Assad, has been accused of committing widespread atrocities against the Syrian people. The  United Nations says 4 million people needed assistance even before the earthquake.

The rebel-held northwest is the area in Syria hardest hit by the 7.8 magnitude earthquake, although nearby government-controlled regions have also suffered widespread casualties and destruction.

Assad's government says foreign countries should respect Syria's sovereignty and that aid for any part of the country should enter via territory under government control.

There are four border crossings between Syria and Turkey - three of which have been forced shut by Damascus' ally Russia at the United Nations. 

Read the full article summarising the challenges facing aid delivery in Syria.

1:23 PM
°®Âþµº Staff

Recovery from Turkey-Syria quake 'could take over a generation': aid group

Recovery from the Turkey-Syria earthquake could take "over a generation", a humanitarian organisation has warned a week after the disaster struck.

Last Monday's 7.8-magnitude earthquake, which has killed over 35,000 people in southern Turkey and northern Syria, has caused devastation not seen in over a decade, according to World Vision, who have been providing aid in the region following the quake.

"The earthquake is serving up a cocktail of catastrophe from wide scale death, destruction and injuries… The impact is so enormous," Johan Mooij, World Vision Syria Response Director was quoted as saying in a statement received by °®Âþµº.

"It could take a generation for survivors to recover, maybe longer in Northern Syria where millions were already living on humanitarian aid with few prospects of their lives improving," they added.

Up to seven people were sharing tents due to the scale of displacement from Syria’s conflict prior to the quake, and following the earthquake this figure has reached 17 people per tent, the aid organisation said.

Read the full story here.

12:16 PM
°®Âþµº Staff & Agencies

Syria's Bashar al-Assad to consider opening more border crossings into quake-hit northern Syria: WHO

The WHO chief said on Sunday that Syria's President Bashar al-Assad had voiced openness to more border crossings for aid to be brought to quake victims in the country's rebel-held northwest.

World Health Organisation chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus met with the Syrian president in Damascus on Sunday afternoon to discuss the response to the devastating earthquake which has killed more than 35,000 people across Syria and Turkey.

Concerns have been running particularly high for how aid might reach all those in need in Syria, which has been devastated by more than a decade of civil war where Assad and his allies have been accused of committing widespread atrocities.

Three of four border crossings into rebel-held parts of northern Syria have been forced shut by Assad's allies at the UN, hindering aid deliveries to the stricken region. 

9:46 AM
°®Âþµº Staff & Agencies

UN aid chief: earthquake rescue phase 'coming to a close'

The phase of the rescue after the major earthquake struck Turkey and Syria a week ago is "coming to a close" with urgency now switching to shelter, food, schooling and psychosocial care, the UN aid chief said during a visit to Syria on Monday.

"What is the most striking here, is even in Aleppo, which has suffered so much these many years, this moment ... was about the worst that these people have experienced," Martin Griffiths said from the government-held northwestern Syrian city of Aleppo that was a major front line in the Syrian civil war.

The 6 February earthquake struck a swathe of northwest Syria, a region partitioned by the 11-year-long war, including insurgent-held territory at the Turkish border and government areas controlled by President Bashar al-Assad.

9:38 AM
°®Âþµº Staff & Agencies

Death toll in Syria surpasses 4,300, according to UN

More than 4,300 people were dead and more than 7,600 others were injured in northwest Syria as of 12 February following the deadly earthquake and aftershocks in neighbouring Turkey, the UN office for humanitarian affairs (OCHA) said in a statement on Monday.

Rescue workers in Syria's opposition-held northwest zones have revealed a lower toll as of Friday, and are anticipating announcing higher toll in the hours ahead.

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