The National - News

Turkish voters trusted Erdogan to rebuild but earthquake­s remain an election issue

- MICHAEL DAVENTRY Michael Sercan Daventry is a British-Turkish journalist, broadcaste­r and political commentato­r

Iheard the most harrowing anecdote about Turkey’s worst-ever natural disaster a few weeks after it happened.

“It got to the point where we would walk the devastated streets in silence, not daring to dislodge rubble or utter a sound. We didn’t want the people trapped underneath to hear a sound, because if they did, they would call out to us. There simply wasn’t anything we could do to help them.”

The words belonged not to a survivor, but a journalist sent to cover the aftermath.

Thousands of people – we will never know precisely how many – survived the initial tremor when it struck shortly after four o’clock in the morning. We know this because of the phone calls, WhatsApp messages and shrieks that came from those trapped beneath the wreckage of what used to be their bedrooms.

Indeed, one of those who was reported to have called for help was a member of parliament for the governing Justice and Developmen­t Party (AKP), Yakup Tas. He and his family perished at home in the town of Adiyaman.

It was the result of two tremors, the largest of which measured 7.8 – a magnitude never before recorded in Turkey. The two quakes struck within nine hours of each other.

That helps to explain why the scale of devastatio­n was so vast. More than 50,000 people died. Over 100,000 were injured. Many more who survived suddenly had no place to live, because three quarters of a million of homes either collapsed or were damaged beyond repair, according to the government department overseeing the rebuilding effort.

Perhaps no country could have been fully prepared for a natural disaster like this one, but there is consensus across Turkey that the initial response was not fast enough. Just one of the unbearable tragedies from those colossal earthquake­s in February last year is that the help did not come in time.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said as much himself five days after the deadly earthquake when he told reporters on a visit to the disaster zone: “Our interventi­ons have not reached the speed we want.”

It was true. Additional heavy machinery capable of lifting rubble took days to reach the area. There was a shortage of basic supplies like food, water and fuel, and often the aid and volunteers that did arrive would be sent to places where the need was not necessaril­y the most urgent.

Then there was the poor co-ordination. There were times when government agencies, charities and private people appeared to compete with each other in the rescue effort. It meant there were locations that received a glut of attention, while other areas – like those devastated streets toured by the journalist­s – echoed with voices calling for help that would never come.

A year has passed, and the tours of the earthquake disaster zone have resumed. This time, ministers are in triumphant mood: on Saturday, keys to the first reconstruc­ted homes were handed over to earthquake victims – whose names were drawn out of a hat – in Turkey’s southernmo­st city, Antakya.

Inevitably, given the gargantuan task ahead to rebuild, not everyone who lost their home has yet got one back. Many thousands live in temporary accommodat­ion – guest houses, shipping containers and tents are all still in use.

Mr Erdogan’s pre-election promise last year was to build 319,000 homes within 12 months of the disaster. The pledge has only been partially met – 46,000 homes are ready so far, and this week the President said he hoped to quadruple that figure by the end of 2024.

The provinces that make up the disaster zone are a political microcosm of Turkey: Mr Erdogan and the AKP are dominant force, as they have been for the past two decades, but parties representi­ng the centre left, opposition-minded nationalis­ts, religious conservati­ves and Kurds were all in with a shout.

Just 12 weeks after the disaster, they were given the opportunit­y to respond to ineffectiv­e relief efforts. Voters chose not to take it. It was a sign they saw Mr Erdogan, not his rival – who also promised to rebuild but not on the same timescale – as the best hope they had to rebuild their lives.

Another opportunit­y is coming at the end of next month when voting takes place for local mayors, assemblies and neighbourh­ood leaders. There is little sign of a dramatic electoral shift then, either.

Yet the events in the southeast have served to focus political minds in the opposite, most populous end of the country: Istanbul. The metropolis was last struck by an earthquake of similar magnitude in 1999, when official records say 20,000 people died. Most experts expect another tremor of similar magnitude within three decades of it.

The prophesied Great Istanbul Earthquake would strike a city of about 16 million residents, many of whom live in dangerous housing. Mehmet Ozhaseki, the minister for Environmen­t, Urbanisati­on and Climate Change, said last year that one tenth of the city’s six million homes were at “great risk” and needed to change immediatel­y. This is also a part of the country that, unlike the south-east, is close to the sea, presenting the risk of tsunamis.

That is why the two frontrunne­rs in Istanbul’s mayoral election on March 31 have placed earthquake preparedne­ss at the heart of their campaigns.

The pledges from Mr Erdogan’s candidate, Murat Kurum, closely resemble those of the President: he promises to build hundreds of thousands of new quake-resistant homes in a single five-year term as mayor.

In doing so he hopes to unseat the incumbent Ekrem Imamoglu, a member of the opposition Republican People’s Party, or CHP, who says it’s still not clear how vulnerable Istanbul is to an earthquake – because his municipal teams haven’t been able to inspect existing buildings.

He claims the government is obstructin­g this work; Mr Kurum makes an identical claim about municipal institutio­ns run by Mr Imamoglu. The two men represent either side of the big divide in Turkey today: do you support Mr Erdogan, or oppose him?

It will be for voters to decide which side’s promises to believe – and, when Istanbul’s earthquake inevitably strikes, which they will trust to rebuild.

The two frontrunne­rs in Istanbul’s mayoral race have placed earthquake preparedne­ss at the heart of their campaigns

 ?? AP ?? Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan visits earthquake survivors on February 8 last year
AP Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan visits earthquake survivors on February 8 last year
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