Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Nation commemorat­es Feb. 6 quake victims on ‘Earth Hour’

- EDITOR AMINA ALI ISTANBUL / DAILY SABAH WITH AA

TÜRKİYE will participat­e in “Earth Hour” by switching off its lights as a way to remember and commemorat­e victims of the last month’s devastatin­g earthquake­s that killed more than 50,000 people.

In a statement, the World Wildlife Fund for Nature-Türkiye (WWF-Türkiye) said the Earth Hour event is held around the world on the last Saturday of March every year at the call of the foundation, and this year will take place on March 25 between 8:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. local time (5:30 p.m.6:30 p.m. GMT). Countries around the world shut off their lights for 60 minutes in a global call for internatio­nal unity on the importance of climate change.

As part of the event led by WWFTürkiye, the lights of monuments, institutio­ns and houses in Türkiye will be turned off in memory of those who lost their lives in the twin devastatin­g tremors on Feb. 6.

The nongovernm­ental organizati­on (NGO) also calls for a “green recovery” mobilizati­on to rebuild earthquake­affected areas in a disaster-resilient manner during Earth Hour. Participan­ts will be able to support the “green recovery” campaign by signing up on the Earth Hour event website.

“Time almost stopped on Feb. 6. For 16 years, we have turned the lights off for an hour to draw attention to the steps to be taken for the future of our world, this time we will turn off the lights to commemorat­e our losses,” Asli Pasinli, the head of WWF-Türkiye, was quoted as saying in the statement.

“This year, Earth Hour is the hour for us to commemorat­e the losses of the most devastatin­g earthquake­s in our country’s history,” she added.

Business Council for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Türkiye Chairperso­n Ebru Dildar Edin, who also talked to Anadolu Agency (AA) on the occasion of Earth Hour, pointed out that the restructur­ing of the disaster area on the basis of sustainabi­lity is of vital importance.

Started in Sydney in 2007 as a symbolic lights-out event, WWF’s flagship global environmen­tal action Earth Hour has grown to become one of the world’s largest grassroots movements for the environmen­t, inspiring individual­s, communitie­s, businesses, and organizati­ons in 190 countries and territorie­s to take tangible environmen­tal action.

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