Penticton Herald

Canada sending another $30M in aid to Turkey, Syria, as rebuild begins

- By The Canadian Press

OTTAWA — The federal government is sending another $20 million in aid for people affected by the devastatin­g earthquake in Turkey and Syria, and matching millions more in private donations.

Internatio­nal Developmen­t Minister Harjit Sajjan says Canada will match $10 million in donations to members of the Humanitari­an Coalition, on top of the $10 million in matching donations to the Canadian Red Cross.

The announceme­nt comes after the United Nations asked for more help and a group of Canadian MPs urged the government to expand the donationma­tching to more organizati­ons.

The Humanitari­an Coalition, which includes Oxfam, Plan Internatio­nal and World Vision as members, is providing emergency food, water, sanitation and health services.

Two major earthquake­s and hundreds of aftershock­s shook the region on Feb. 6, damaging tens of thousands of buildings and leaving more than 47,000 people dead.

The UN Children’s Fund, UNICEF, says more than a million people are staying in temporary accommodat­ions, including gyms, stadiums, hotels and dormitorie­s, with limited access to essential services.

“The children and families who survived the earthquake now face homelessne­ss, lack of food and water, and temperatur­es that regularly drop below freezing at night,” said Afshan Khan, UNICEF’s regional director for Europe and Central Asia.

Turkish authoritie­s on Friday said preliminar­y work has started to build housing for people left homeless by the

massive earthquake.

Murat Kurum, the minister for the environmen­t, urbanizati­on and climate change, said on Twitter that excavation­s were taking place in the towns of Nurdagi and Islahiye in Gaziantep province, where the government plans to build an initial 855 homes.

The work comes less than three weeks after the magnitude 7.8 quake struck. Turkish authoritie­s say some 173,000 buildings, containing around 534,000 apartments or other units, either collapsed or were severely damaged in the quake.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who faces tough elections in either May or June, has promised to reconstruc­t homes within the year, although critics have warned that moving too fast could just lead to the erection of more substandar­d homes.

Opposition parties have also held Erdogan’s government – in power for the past two decades – responsibl­e for the extent of the disaster, accusing it of failing to enforce building regulation­s.

Experts say many of the toppled structures were built with inferior materials and methods, and often did not comply with government standards.

Earlier Friday, Erdogan issued a decree which among other things enables individual­s, companies or organizati­ons to build homes or offices and donate them to Kurum’s ministry, which would then give them to people who lost homes or businesses.

Justice Minister Bekir Bozdag said late Thursday that 583 contractor­s or other people suspected of responsibi­lity over buildings that have collapsed were being investigat­ed and 171 have been arrested.

 ?? ?? The Canadian Press
Excavators work at the site of buildings Friday that collapsed during the earthquake in Kahramanma­ras, Turkey.
The Canadian Press Excavators work at the site of buildings Friday that collapsed during the earthquake in Kahramanma­ras, Turkey.

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