The Philippine Star

Turkish teams hunt for quake survivors; deaths hit 38

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ANKARA (AP) — Working against the clock in freezing temperatur­es, Turkish rescue teams pulled more survivors from collapsed buildings Sunday, days after a powerful magnitude 6.8 earthquake hit the country’s east. Rescued survivors wept with gratitude for their efforts.

Turkish authoritie­s said the death toll rose to at least 38 people from the magnitude 6.8 earthquake that struck Friday night.

Turkish television showed Ayse Yildiz, 35, and her two-year-old daughter Yusra being dragged out of the rubble of a collapsed apartment building in the city of Elazig.

They had been trapped for 28 hours.

The quake also injured over 1,600 people but at least 45 survivors have been pulled alive from the rubble so far, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan told a news conference Sunday in Istanbul.

More than 780 aftershock­s rocked the region as over 3,500 rescue experts scrambled through wrecked buildings to reach survivors, working around the clock.

Rescue teams concentrat­ed their efforts in the city’s Mustafa Pasa neighborho­od and the nearby town of Sivrice.

One rescued couple was reunited with a Syrian student who had helped to dig them out of their collapsed home with his hands.

“He is our hero and angel,” a weeping Dudane Aydin said of Mahmud al Osman in an interview on Turkey’s state-run Anadolu news agency.

Her husband Zulkuf added: “When I saw the light of Mahmud’s phone, we started shouting for help. Then we knew we would get out.”

He said Mahmud helped him out but when the student tried to rescue his wife her leg was trapped by debris.

“Some locals held Mahmud by the legs and stretching towards my wife he worked to save her.”

 ?? AP ?? A rescuer pulls out a girl from the rubble of a collapsed building in Turkey on Saturday.
AP A rescuer pulls out a girl from the rubble of a collapsed building in Turkey on Saturday.

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