Oroville Mercury-Register

Rescuers push to find survivors of the ‘disaster of the century’

- By Justin Spike, Ghaith Alsayed and Zeynep Bilginsoy

Rescue workers made a final push Thursday to find survivors of the earthquake in Turkey and Syria that rendered many communitie­s unrecogniz­able to their inhabitant­s and led the Turkish president to declare it “the disaster of the century.” The death toll topped 20,000.

The earthquake af- fected an area that is home to 13.5 million people in Turkey and an unknown number in Syria and stretches farther than the distance from London to Paris or Boston to Philadelph­ia. Even with an army of people taking part in the rescue effort, crews had to pick and choose where to help.

The scene from the air showed the scope of devastatio­n, with entire neighborho­ods of high-rises reduced to twisted metal, pulverized concrete and exposed wires.

In Adiyaman, Associated Press journalist­s saw someone plead with rescuers to look through the rubble of a building where relatives were trapped. They refused, saying no one was alive there and that they had to prioritize areas with possible survivors.

A man who gave his name only as Ahmet out of fear of government retributio­n later asked the AP: “How can I go home and sleep? My brother is there. He may still be alive.”

The death toll from Monday’s 7.8 magnitude catastroph­e rose to nearly 21,000, eclipsing the more than 18,400 who died in the 2011 earthquake off Fukushima, Japan, that triggered a tsunami and the estimated 18,000 people who died in a temblor near the Turkish capital, Istanbul, in 1999.

The new figure, which is certain to rise, included over 17,600 people in Turkey and more than 3,300 in civil war-torn Syria. Tens of thousands were also injured.

Even though experts say people could survive for a week or more, the chances of finding survivors in the freezing temperatur­es were dimming. As emergency crews and panicked relatives dug through the rubble — and occasional­ly found people alive — the focus began to shift to demolishin­g dangerousl­y unstable structures.

 ?? PETROS GIANNAKOUR­IS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Residents walk in front of a destroyed building in Nurdagi, southeaste­rn Turkey, on Thursday.
PETROS GIANNAKOUR­IS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Residents walk in front of a destroyed building in Nurdagi, southeaste­rn Turkey, on Thursday.

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