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Turkey-Syria live news: Rescues continue as death toll tops 25000

Turkish rescue workers carry Ergin Guzeloglan, 36, to an ambulance after pulling him out from a collapsed building five days after an earthquake in Hatay, southern Turkey [Can Ozer/AP] By Arwa Ibrahim, Usaid Siddiqui and Kevin Doyle

Turkey-Syria live news: Rescues continue as death toll tops 25000

Turkey-Syria earthquakes. These are the latest updates:

The death toll stands at more than 25,000 in Turkey and northwestern Syria as rescue efforts continue.

The number of deaths in Turkey rose to 21,848 on Saturday while more than 3,553 were killed in Syria.

United Nations says up to 5.3 million people in Syria may be homeless after the earthquakes, while nearly 900,000 people are in urgent need of hot food in Turkey and Syria.

The Syrian government has approved the delivery of humanitarian aid to quake-hit areas outside its control, according to state media.

Turkey says it is working to open two new routes into rebel-held parts of Syria.

Rescues described as miraculous continue more than 100 hours after the tremors of the first earthquake struck.

You can find information on how to donate to earthquake relief efforts here.

4m ago (19:01 GMT)
‘We want to help,’ Turks rush to aid quake survivors.

With temperatures below freezing, the line of earthquake victims waiting for steaming hot stews and soups stretches out into the dark in the Turkish city of Gaziantep.

Ajde Gunes is one of them, grateful to the restaurants that are feeding the army of homeless in Turkey’s gourmet capital.

“The queues are enormous but the restaurants have done more than the government,” Gunes said, pointedly.

The restaurants are among tens of thousands of people working hard to help families in any way they can across the country after Monday’s 7.8-magnitude earthquake hit Turkey and Syria.

6m ago (18:59 GMT)
Italian aid destined for government-held Syria lands in Beirut, Italian envoy says
A shipment of Italian humanitarian aid destined for government-held parts of Syria landed in Beirut, Italy’s envoy to Damascus has said, in the first European earthquake assistance to the government.

The 30-tonne shipment includes four ambulances and 13 pallets of medical equipment, charge d’affaires Massimiliano D’Antuono told Reuters.

A team of four doctors was also en route, he said.

(Al Jazeera)
53m ago (18:12 GMT)
Looting and hygiene worries add to rescuers’ burden in Turkey
Volunteers struggling to find ever fewer survivors in the quake-hit Turkish city of Antakya have said ransacking and hygiene problems were adding to their daunting task.

One resident, searching for a colleague buried in a collapsed building, said he witnessed looting in the first days after Monday’s quake before leaving the city for a village.

“People were smashing the windows and fences of shops and cars,” said Mehmet Bok, 26, now back in Antakya and searching for a work colleague in a collapsed building.

Another rescuer, Gizem from the southeastern province of Sanliurfa, said she had also seen looters in the four days she had been in Antakya.

“We cannot intervene much as most of the looters carry knives. They caught a looter today, people chased after him,” she said in the city where there was a heavy police and military presence directing traffic, helping rescuers and handing out food.

She described Antakya as a place of death and destruction when she arrived. “We could not hold back our tears,” she said as ambulance sirens wailed in the background.

“If people don’t die here under the rubble, they’ll die from injuries, if not they will die from infection. There is no toilet here. It is a big problem,” she said, adding that there were not enough body bags for all the dead.

1h ago (17:56 GMT)
Turkish naval hospital ship helps earthquake victims
A TCG Bayraktar, the landing craft of the Turkish army, which was converted into a floating hospital after the earthquakes, has been serving those in need in the southern Turkish province of Hatay.

The Turkish army deployed the ship carrying health workers and 560 beds, to MMK Metallurgy Port in the Dortyol District of Hatay, which was severely affected by the two earthquakes that hit the region.

The TCG Bayraktar treated 306 people in the first 24 hours after starting it anchored. The ship has an operating room and intensive care units.

1h ago (17:15 GMT)
Turkey arrests 48 people over looting after quake
Turkish authorities have arrested 48 people for looting after a powerful earthquake hit Turkey, state media reported.

The suspects were held in eight different provinces as part of investigations into looting after Monday’s 7.8-magnitude earthquake hit the region, killing more than 25,000 people in Turkey and Syria, news agency Anadolu said.

2h ago (16:24 GMT)
Survivors still being found in Kahramanmaras
Reporting from the epicentre of the quake in Kahramanmaras, Al Jazeera’s Resul Serdar says that, on the sixth day since the earthquakes hit the area, survivors were still being found.

“A five-year-old Syrian girl was taken out of the rubble, alive. An hour later, another girl was pulled out of the rubble, and she was also alive. These are the rare moments of joy here,” said Serdar.

“This city has seen so much that it needs some good news, and it also gives a spark of hope to the families,” he added.

Serdar said that during the past few hours, however, several bodies were taken out from under the rubble at the same location. “They are probably from the same family,” he said.

He added that while speaking to a woman earlier, she reported already burying more than 110 members of her family and friends.

2h ago (16:18 GMT)
Ceyhan loadings of BTC pipeline oil could begin within two days
Turkey’s Ceyhan port could resume loading oil from the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) pipeline in one or two days using “manual” procedures, a Turkish official and a shipping source has said.

The terminal, on Turkey’s Mediterranean coast, was damaged in the devastating earthquakes that hit Turkey and Syria on Monday.

It is the storage and loading point for the BTC pipeline which carries oil from Azerbaijan, as well as the Kirkuk pipeline from Iraq.

The Kirkuk pipeline resumed flows on Tuesday evening and a tanker docked at Ceyhan loaded that day. A third tanker loaded on Friday.

However, BP Azerbaijan declared force majeure on loadings of Azeri crude from Ceyhan on Wednesday.

2h ago (16:16 GMT)
Glimmer of hope continues as more survivors found
Reporting from Antakya, Al Jazeera’s Bernard Smith says that despite the overwhelming level of destruction in the capital of Turkey’s Hatay province, there was still a glimmer of hope.

“We are in the 135th hour now since the quakes, but there is still some hope. In the 132nd hour, a toddler was rescued, and a couple of hours before that a man and woman were rescued alive. The search for survivors has not stopped,” said Smith.

He added the government plans to reopen the airport in the city within 24 hours.

“The airport runway was badly damaged. They said they are about to re-tarmac that. This will be essential for relief flights. The need is so desperate for aid,” said Smith.

Turkish Hard Coal Enterprises miners from Zonguldak take part in search operations in Antakya [Remi Banet/AFP] 3h ago (15:10 GMT)
Turkey detains 12 over collapsed buildings after quake: report
Turkish police have detained 12 people over collapsed buildings in the southeastern provinces of Gaziantep and Sanliurfa, local media reported, following the huge quake that hit Turkey.

Those taken into custody included contractors, DHA news agency said. At least 6,000 buildings collapsed after a 7.8-magnitude tremor hit the region, killing more than 25,000 people, sparking anger about the poor quality of housing.

There are expected to be more detentions after the public prosecutor in Diyarbakir, one of 10 southeastern provinces affected by the quake, issued arrest warrants for 29 people on Saturday, state news agency reported.

One of those detained Saturday was a contractor for a building in Gaziantep, the agency said, adding he was found by police in Istanbul.

4h ago (14:13 GMT)
Death toll rises above 25,000 in Turkey, Syria quake: officials
Turkey’s president has raised the total death toll from Monday’s earthquakes, bringing the total confirmed dead in Turkey and Syria above 25,000.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Saturday that the number of those killed in the quakes in Turkey had reached 21,848. The total number of deaths in Syria stood at 3,553.

(Al Jazeera)
4h ago (14:09 GMT)
Sixteen babies saved, transferred to Ankara
Reporting from Ankara, Al Jazeera’s Sinem Koseoglu says 16 infants were transferred from the epicentre of the earthquake, Kahramanmaras, to the capital city, Ankara, by the Turkish authorities.

“All of them have been identified, but the authorities have not been able to reach their families,” reported Koseoglu.

“As these babies fight for their lives in the ICU, the authorities search for their families,” she said.

The premature babies will remain in the intensive care unit until they are stronger. The rest will be attended by foster mothers appointed by the government.

“The babies are in good shape,” said Ferit Kulal, a chief physician at the hospital where the babies have been taken. “One of the babies was born at 28 weeks and another at 33. Following the completion of their examinations, we will plan their discharge,” he said.

5h ago (13:52 GMT)
Nearly two minute earthquakes cause of mass destruction: AFAD
Reporting from Ankara, Al Jazeera’s Sinem Koseoglu said that according to the spokesperson for the Turkish disaster management agency, AFAD, the reason for the huge level of destruction caused by Monday’s earthquakes was the length of the quakes.

The first earthquake, with a 7.8 magnitude, lasted for 65 seconds, while the second which happened a few hours later, lasted for 45 seconds, according to AFAD.

“We are talking about earthquakes that lasted more than two minutes. This is why we see this level of catastrophe in an area of about 110 square kilometres [42sq miles], where 13.5 million people lived,” reported Koseoglu.

She added that AFAD warned citizens to stay away from their buildings until they are risk assessed.

“Currently, there are 1300 teams on the ground to risk assess all the buildings. Until then, people will be taking shelter in the dormitories provided by the government.

“That is why universities will be closed until the summer and the dormitories will be designed for the earthquake survivors. Shelter is a big problem because we are talking about a large number of people,” explained Koseoglu.

5h ago (13:35 GMT)
Fundraisers for Syria, Turkey earthquake try to deliver aid
Humanitarian groups working in southern Turkey and northwest Syria warn that Monday’s earthquake will have a “long tail” — a wide range of needs that will require donations for months, or even years, after the rescue and recovery missions end.

“We were able to do a massive distribution of food and blankets to more than 500 families,” from one of their warehouses in the immediate aftermath of the quake, said Avril Benoît, executive director for Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières USA. Her organisation keeps emergency supplies on hand in the case of major disasters.

“There’s a long tail to an emergency like this, both for the injured from the earthquake, but also for chronic disease management, making sure they have access to their medications,” Benoit said.

The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies said they had 5,200 volunteers mobilised on both sides of the Syria-Turkey border, with the Turkish operation being more robust and better equipped because of its longstanding programme to support Syrian refugees.

6h ago (12:45 GMT)
Erdogan says government to take action against looting
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said his government would take action against those involved in looting and other crimes in the region hit by earthquakes.

“We’ve declared a state of emergency,” he said during a visit to the disaster zone. “It means that, from now on, the people who are involved in looting or kidnapping should know that the state’s firm hand is on their backs,” he said.

6h ago (12:25 GMT)
‘Very difficult’ in Idlib province says Syrian doctor
A Syrian doctor at a maternity hospital in Idlib province says the situation since the earthquakes is “very difficult” amid slow aid and medical deliveries.

“No food, no camps, no drinks. As doctors … we don’t have medical devices in our hospitals for many surgeries, [including] neurosurgeries. And the hospital is full of people,” Ikram Habbaoush, a member of the Syrian American Medical Society, told Al Jazeera via Skype.

“The aid has come very slowly. If your baby needs emergency surgery … we cannot do it because the medical devices have not arrived.”

6h ago (12:21 GMT)
German rescue, aid groups suspend operations in Hatay
Germany’s Federal Agency for Technical Relief (THW) and the aid organisation ISAR Germany are suspending their rescue work in Turkey’s Hatay province due to security concerns.

The organisations said on Saturday the safety situation had worsened on Saturday. While their teams remained at a joint base camp in the town of Kirikhan for now, if there was a concrete indication that someone could be rescued alive they would still go to the scene, THW spokeswoman Katharina Garrecht told the dpa news agency.

THW and ISAR attributed the tense situation to, among other things, “the shortage of food and the problematic water supply in the earthquake area”.

ISAR director of operations Steven Bayer said, “It can be seen that grief is slowly giving way to anger.”

 

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