CBC Edition

In Turkey's earthquake-ravaged Antakya, residents wonder why city wasn't better prepared

- Briar Stewart

In Antakya's old town, an‐ cient churches, mosques, restaurant­s and hotels sit in mangled mounds of rubble that have been largely un‐ touched since Feb. 6, when two catastroph­ic earth‐ quakes struck just nine hours apart, killing more than 50,000 people in Turkey and Syria.

On the edge of a near-de‐ serted street in this south‐ eastern Turkish city, Mehmet Sirkan Sincan, 50, sits outside of his crumbling antique shop along with some of his vin‐ tage goods. He says he's still open for business.

Sincan lights a cigarette and drinks a coffee. It resem‐ bles a normal morning rou‐ tine, except that he is sur‐ rounded by piles of chalkcolou­red debris, in a city rav‐ aged by a disaster.

He says authoritie­s need to go back decades to find those accountabl­e.

"Those who have made not good things … have to pay something," he said. "People died. Children died. Everybody died."

Antakya, which had a preearthqu­ake population of around 200,000, lies in the province of Hatay in Turkey's southeast. During the earth‐ quakes, the region saw more than half of its 400,000 build‐ ings collapse or become se‐ verely damaged.

Despite President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's vow to re‐ build the homes in the earth‐ quake zone within a year, lo‐ cal officials say it will be months before any construc‐ tion can begin in Antakya be‐ cause aftershock­s are still continuing, and so is the de‐ molition of entire blocks.

As tens of thousands of residents live in tents and trailers, there is still palpable anger among some over why the region wasn't better pre‐ pared, given the risk was well known. In the wake of the de‐ struction in the southeast, ex‐ perts warn a similar disaster could be repeated in the Is‐ tanbul area which is due to experience a major quake of its own.

When the first 7.8 magni‐ tude earthquake struck at 4:17 a.m., Sincan awoke to thunderous shaking in the apartment building he shared with his parents.

He heard the cries of his mom and was eventually able to reunite with her and his fa‐ ther, before heading out to the street to try and rescue people crying out from the rubble.

He closes his eyes and shakes his head as he tells CBC News that he often thinks about those frantic hours after the first quake.

With his apartment build‐ ing too damaged to stay in, he moved into the second floor of his antique shop until a third earthquake, which measured 6.4, struck two weeks later.

He was standing in the street at the time, near mem‐ bers of the Turkish military, when they all crouched as low as they could to the ground.

"I [thought] we were going down this time, it was so hard," he told CBC News on

May 16 outside of his shop in Antakya.

After a few seconds, they started to hear the large "booms" of buildings crashing to the earth, including a fourstorey apartment-style hotel that was across the street.

Officials said six people were killed in the quake which struck just as the rescue mis‐ sion after the first two was winding down.

Tightening codes

Turkey is one of the most earthquake-prone coun‐ tries given its proximity to the intersecti­on of tectonic plates. Two fault lines run across it, and February's quakes stemmed from slips on the 700-km East Anatolian fault.

Experts say the country is also at a great risk for severe destructio­n given hundreds of thousands of its buildings have poor structural integrity.

In 1998, the country tight‐ ened its constructi­on codes to make buildings more earthquake resistant. A year later, when a 7.4 earthquake in the western city of Izmit killed more than 17,000 peo‐ ple, more regulation­s were in‐ troduced to enforce the de‐ sign code and inspection of new buildings.

But even new, supposedly state-of-the-art buildings came crashing down in the February earthquake­s, lead‐ ing to accusation­s of fraud and corruption.

Authoritie­s have issued more 230 arrest warrants for developers and contractor­s.

A New York Times investi‐ gation found that a developer won zoning approval for a five-tower residentia­l com‐ plex in Antakya after donating more than $270,000 to a local soccer club.

Four of the five towers col‐ lapsed in the earthquake­s and authoritie­s have launched a criminal investiga‐ tion. building

When it was opened in 2019, it was marketed as be‐ ing built to the highest stan‐ dard.

The mayor of Hatay, Lütfü Savaş, helped officially open the buildings by holding a pair of golden scissors.

Today he is facing calls for his resignatio­n, and dismiss‐ ing them.

'Everybody has a respon‐ sibility'

In an interview with CBC News on May 16, Savaş said so many of Hatay's buildings were destroyed because "it was hard to withstand" the strength of the successive earthquake­s.

Savaş, a member of the main opposition Republican People's Party, acknowledg­ed that even buildings construct‐ ed after the earthquake codes were tightened "may have de‐ ficiencies."

"But when constructi­on is done, engineers, companies, contractor­s, supervisor­s, mu‐ nicipality, government .... Everybody has a responsibi­li‐ ty," he said.

He says rebuilding can't begin yet in Antakya be‐ cause it wouldn't be "scientifi‐ cally correct" to start pouring foundation­s while aftershock­s continue.

He says officials are also working on a plan to rebuild the ancient city, which has been destroyed by earth‐ quakes several times during its 2,400-year history.

He says the plan includes restrictin­g the height of build‐ ings and adding more green space in the city centre, where the soil is particular­ly unsta‐ ble.

Warning signs

There had been plenty of warnings and prediction­s from experts about Hatay's vulnerabil­ity.

One month before the quakes, Şükrü Ersoy, a geolo‐ gist and dean of civil engineer‐ ing at Istanbul's Yildiz Techni‐ cal University, gave a presen‐ tation about Hatay's lack of preparedne­ss.

For years he and others had been warning about the poor location of Hatay's air‐ port, which was built on top of a fault line and a drained

lake bed. It was constructe­d and opened anyway in 2007, which Ersoy saw as "a political decision."

"It is a strategic place in the Middle East," he said, as the airport lies just 30 km from the Syrian border.

During the earthquake, its only runway was destroyed. While the airport is back up and running with limited flights, officials are discussing if, and where, it should be re‐ located.

High risk in Istanbul

Ersoy, who was one of the experts who met with Erdo‐ gan in the days following the disaster, is now repeating his warnings about what could come next — a quake in Turkey's Marmara region, near the city of Istanbul.

He says the earthquake re‐ currence period is 250 years and the last big earthquake along that section of the fault line happened in 1776.

"That is why there is a big tension in Marmara Sea," he said.

He expects an earthquake 7.0 or even 7.5 will eventually occur, which could produce a tsunami. In a region with a population of 30 million peo‐ ple, he believes the deaths could be as high as 150,000.

In the municipali­ty of Is‐ tanbul, nearly 70 per cent of all of buildings were built be‐ fore 2000, according to Özlem Tut, head of a project to in‐ spect buildings there.

For the past three years, city crews have been inspect‐ ing buildings for structural in‐ tegrity and found that about half of the nearly 30,000 build‐ ings they looked at could col‐ lapse in a major earthquake.

Those who live in buildings that are at the highest risk can apply for funding to reno‐ vate, but Tut told CBC News that initially there was limited interest in the project. She said people were afraid that their homes could be demol‐ ished if they failed the inspec‐ tion.

However, after the earth‐ quakes, Tut said there has been a surge in interest and her team had received more than 150,000 applicatio­ns. But there is a limited number of crews to do the work.

Back in Antakya, Sincan wants to see life return, but admits that the old town like‐ ly won't be the way it was be‐ fore.

Inside his antique shop, he has a map of Turkey's fault lines hanging on the wall. He says he decided to put it up just six months before the earthquake­s.

"For me it was maybe a message," he said. "Wake up ... something bad is coming."

WATCH | Residents of Hatay province deal with aftermath of Feb. 20 quake:

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