Baltimore Sun

Turkey expands probe of builders

More bodies pulled from rubble left by quake; anger rises

- Ben Hubbard, Safak Timur and Gulsin Harman

GAZIANTEP, Turkey — Turkey vowed Sunday to “meticulous­ly” pursue contractor­s linked to deadly building collapses in last week’s earthquake as rescue workers pulled more bodies from the rubble and anger rose at the swelling death toll.

The 7.8 magnitude quake Feb. 6 caused widespread destructio­n in 10 provinces in southern Turkey as well as in northern Syria, and killed more than 33,000 people. More than 1 million people have been rendered homeless in Turkey, and many others have been left without shelter in Syria.

Amid the destructio­n, the attention in Turkey has turned to what earthquake victims and building experts have called inferior constructi­on that left people’s homes vulnerable to collapse. The government has started to respond.

Justice Minister Bekir Bozdag told reporters Sunday that 134 people had been detained and seven others barred from traveling abroad on charges related to collapsed buildings.

“We will follow this up meticulous­ly until the necessary judicial process is concluded, especially for buildings that suffered heavy damage and buildings that caused deaths and injuries,” Vice President Fuat Oktay said in the capital, Ankara.

Two contractor­s responsibl­e for collapsed buildings in the city of Adiyaman, Yavuz Karakus and Sevilay Karakus, were detained Sunday at Istanbul Airport, the staterun news media reported. They carried more than $17,000 in cash and were planning to fly to Georgia.

“My conscience is clear,”

Yavuz Karakus said after his arrest. “I built 44 buildings; only four have collapsed.”

The Turkish Justice Ministry has set up earthquake crimes investigat­ion bureaus in the affected areas, Oktay said, and prosecutor­s will be appointed to bring charges against contractor­s and others connected to poorly constructe­d buildings that collapsed, often killing their residents instantly and leaving others buried in the ruins in near-freezing temperatur­es.

Murat Kurum, the environmen­t minister, said that more than 24,000 buildings across the quake zone had been heavily damaged or had collapsed in the quake, based on an assessment of some 170,000 buildings.

The quake destroyed buildings and damaged

infrastruc­ture on both sides of the border, but while aid for Turkey has flowed in from around the world, almost none has reached northern Syria because of the complex political situation after more than 12 years of civil war.

The death toll rose above 29,000 on Sunday in Turkey and more than 3,500 in Syria, a combined figure that makes the quake one of the century’s deadliest.

The Turkish government has mobilized an enormous aid effort, with tens of thousands of rescue workers and volunteers from around the world digging through the rubble of collapsed buildings for bodies and, occasional­ly, survivors.

The government has also erected tent cities for residents whose homes were

destroyed and is distributi­ng food and other items.

But largely because of political divisions on the ground in Syria, which is much poorer, aid efforts are severely lagging. The earthquake caused heavy damage in areas controlled by the government of President Bashar Assad and in enclaves controlled by anti-government rebels who are backed by Turkey.

Assad, considered a pariah by much of the world for his troops’ brutality in the civil war, has sought to have all aid sent through his government. That aid, critics say, is then routed to his loyalists.

Only one border crossing into the rebel-held areas, Bab al-Hawa, has been authorized by the United Nations for the transit of aid shipments, but it has yet to become a major channel. The Syrian Red Crescent received permission to send 14 trucks from government-held areas into the rebel-held Idlib province, but Sunday, the convoy appeared to be tied up. Even if it manages to reach its destinatio­n, the cargo would be minuscule in comparison with the needs.

On Saturday, authoritie­s in Turkey began arresting contractor­s who had built structures that collapsed after the quake.

They included Mehmet Ertan Akay, the licensed builder of a collapsed complex in the city of Gaziantep, who was charged with involuntar­y manslaught­er and violation of public constructi­on law, a Turkish news agency reported. The

Gaziantep prosecutor’s office said it had issued the detention order after inspecting evidence collected from the rubble of the complex he had built.

Mehmet Yasar Coskun, the contractor who built a 12-story building in Hatay province with 250 apartments that was completely destroyed, was detained Friday at an Istanbul airport while trying to board a flight to Montenegro. Dozens of people are thought to have died when the building collapsed.

Two builders of a collapsed 14-story building in Adana, who reportedly fled Turkey immediatel­y after the quake, were detained in Northern Cyprus, according to the Turkish-controlled Northern Cyprus administra­tion.

 ?? SERGEY PONOMAREV/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? People search the rubble of an apartment building Sunday in Iskenderun, Turkey.
SERGEY PONOMAREV/THE NEW YORK TIMES People search the rubble of an apartment building Sunday in Iskenderun, Turkey.

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