San Diego Union-Tribune

CREWS RACE TIME, COLD TO FIND SURVIVORS

- BY KAREEM FAHIM, SARAH DADOUCH, ELLEN FRANCIS, RACHEL PANNETT & CLAIRE PARKER KAHRAMANMA­RAS, Turkey

Yellow excavators dug long trenches on the edge of a pine forest here Thursday, rushing to provide burial space for hundreds of people recovered from collapsed buildings as authoritie­s in Turkey and Syria announced the death toll from this week’s earthquake­s had surpassed 21,000, making it the deadliest such disaster in more than a decade.

The makeshift, rapidly expanding cemetery just outside Kahramanma­ras, a city near the initial quake’s epicenter, hinted at the massive effort that would be required in the coming weeks to bury the victims, as a small battalion of gravedigge­rs, prosecutor­s, mortuary workers and others descended on the site.

Elsewhere, desperate efforts were still under way to rescue survivors and help the tens of thousands of people displaced by the earthquake­s. A U.N. aid convoy crossed into rebel-held northwest Syria through Turkey on Thursday, the first since the earthquake disaster flattened neighborho­ods in both countries.

Recovery efforts in Syria have been hampered by the effects of the civil war that divided the country into areas of government and opposition control. The United Nations said damage to delivery routes delayed aid to the rebel enclave, where millions of people are displaced and many live in camps.

The hope of finding more people in the wreckage was dimming on both sides of the border, and survivors and opposition politician­s in Turkey expressed frustratio­n at what they said was the government’s slow and haphazard response to the disaster.

Freezing temperatur­es have lengthened the odds, even as internatio­nal teams arrive in Turkey with equipment and rescue dogs to detect the scent of humans beneath the wreckage. But in both Turkey and rebel-held areas of Syria, rescue workers continued to pull survivors, including young children, out of the rubble, in a race against time.

The death toll in Turkey rose Thursday to at least 17,674, with more than 72,000 injured, state media reported, citing Vice President Fuat Oktay. The full impact of the earthquake­s — which registered magnitude 7.8 and 7.5 — was not yet clear, given the extent of the damage. Already, the quakes rank as the world’s deadliest earthquake disaster in more than a decade.

At least three U.S. citizens were among those killed

in southern Turkey, according to the State Department.

In government-held parts of Syria, the death toll rose to 1,347, with 2,295 injured, state media reported. In Syria’s northwest, volunteer civil defense forces reported more than 2,030 killed and 2,950 injured, a tally they said they expect to rise.

On Thursday, six trucks carrying aid crossed into opposition-held Syria from Turkey, said Jens Laerke, spokesman for the U.N. Office for the Coordinati­on of Humanitari­an Affairs. Severe damage to the road normally used by aid convoys had delayed operations.

“On the Turkish side, we were able to identify two routes that we will be using from now on because the regular one was too damaged,” he said. “We consider this a test, that things can restart.”

Syria’s government has restricted access to the rebel-held region, where aid deliveries depend on votes by the U.N. Security Council. In 2020, Russia, a permanent member of the council, forced all but one aid border crossing to close.

The convoy on Thursday was carrying enough items — including blankets, tents

and solar lamps — to meet the needs of “at least 5,000 people,” the U.N. Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration said in a statement.

But the Syrian Civil Defense group, which is leading rescue efforts in northwest Syria, said the delivery was a

resumption of normal aid, and did not include specialize­d assistance or excavation tools for its teams.

Syrians are “desperate for equipment that will help us save lives from under the rubble,” said the aid group, also known as the White Helmets,

which operates in the region outside government control.

Before Monday’s quakes, humanitari­an needs in northwest Syria were already at their highest levels since the civil war began, U.N. Secretary General António Guterres said Thursday. Millions of people displaced by the civil war had already been enduring a brutal winter without heating when the earthquake hit, and power outages are creating fuel shortages in hospitals. Snowfall has further impeded rescue efforts there, with temperatur­es dipping well below freezing overnight.

The United Nations is deploying disaster assessment experts, coordinati­ng search-and-rescue teams, and sending emergency relief — “and we are committed to do much more,” Guterres told reporters.

Across the border in Turkey, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan visited the city of Gaziantep on Thursday, where the quakes devastated residentia­l blocks. He also visited the cities of Osmaniye and Kilis.

“With the scope and impact of the disaster we have experience­d being this great, there may be some delays and shortcomin­gs,” he said in Osmaniye.

Erdogan has urged citizens to be patient and pledged to rebuild shattered towns and cities. More than 6,400 buildings were destroyed, according to government estimates. He said the Turkish government would offer families 10,000 Turkish lire, or around $530.

Nearly 100 countries and hundreds of nongovernm­ental organizati­ons have provided medical aid to Turkey, and more than 6,300 emergency personnel had arrived from 56 countries, Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said Thursday. The World Bank also announced $1.78 billion in aid to Turkey for relief and recovery efforts.

A U.S. disaster response

team in Turkey was helping with search-and-rescue operations in Adiyaman. And USAID administra­tor Samantha Power said the United States would provide $85 million in humanitari­an assistance for people in Turkey and Syria.

In southern Turkey, survivors scuffled for tents and blankets distribute­d by aid agencies. Families with missing loved ones sifted through the debris without any assistance; in some places, heavy equipment has taken days to arrive.

“The situation is very bad,” said Mohammed Farhan Khalid, the leader of a team of Pakistani rescuers in the shattered city of Adiyaman. He compared the Turkish earthquake­s to a 2005 quake in Kashmir that killed tens of thousands.

The disaster has also orphaned many children. Sixteen babies were flown from Kahramanma­ras in the south to the capital, Ankara, to be cared for by state institutio­ns, Turkey’s social services minister said Thursday.

Access to social media platforms Twitter and TikTok was restricted for some Turkish users on Wednesday. The Internet-monitoring group NetBlocks later stated that Twitter services were restored after Turkish policymake­rs met with Twitter officials.

Ankara has previously cracked down on social media companies in the wake of disasters or during periods of political scandal or unrest.

A three-month state of emergency started Thursday in 10 quake-affected provinces in Turkey, after a vote in the Turkish parliament. The declaratio­n will allow authoritie­s to prevent people from looting stores and take action against groups trying to profit from the tragedy, Turkey’s disaster management agency quoted Erdogan as saying.

 ?? FRANCISCO SECO AP ?? Rescuers and others console a man (center) after crews recovered the body of his father from a destroyed building in Elbistan, southeaste­rn Turkey, on Thursday. The death toll from Monday’s earthquake­s in Turkey and Syria surpassed 21,000 on Thursday.
FRANCISCO SECO AP Rescuers and others console a man (center) after crews recovered the body of his father from a destroyed building in Elbistan, southeaste­rn Turkey, on Thursday. The death toll from Monday’s earthquake­s in Turkey and Syria surpassed 21,000 on Thursday.
 ?? GHAITH ALSAYED AP ?? Collapsed buildings are seen through the windows of a quake-damaged house Thursday in the town of Jinderis, Syria. The quake razed thousands of buildings in Syria and Turkey.
GHAITH ALSAYED AP Collapsed buildings are seen through the windows of a quake-damaged house Thursday in the town of Jinderis, Syria. The quake razed thousands of buildings in Syria and Turkey.

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