The Boston Globe

From under rubble, miraculous rescues

Few more dug out but hope for others dwindles

- By Jason Horowitz and Gulsin Harman

For about 200 hours, two Turkish brothers entombed under the rubble of a collapsed building in the earthquake-devastated city of Kahramanma­ras held on, rationing bodybuildi­ng supplement­s, drinking their own urine, swallowing gulps of air.

“Breathing was easy,” one brother, Abdulbaki Yeninar, 21, told the local Ihlas news agency. “We took protein powder.”

On Tuesday, rescue workers pried Yeninar and his brother, Muhammed Enes Yeninar, 17, from the cement and twisted metal, one of at least nine such improbable rescues over a week after a 7.8-magnitude earthquake leveled towns, killed tens of thousands of people, and displaced many more in Turkey and Syria.

In the same city, teams dug a tunnel 16 feet long through tons of fallen walls, floors, and piping to reach a woman, in a rescue that was broadcast on live TV. And to the south, a volunteer mining crew joined the efforts to save another, earning tribute from President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who said they “will never fade away from our memories.”

The miraculous rescues served as rare bright spots in one of the bleakest periods in memory for Turkey, what Erdogan said Tuesday could reasonably be called the “disaster of the century.”

He reported a new death toll for his country, 35,418, and the United Nations said that more than 5,500 Syrians had died. Millions more people in both countries have been displaced since the quake devastated the region last week, with many afraid to return to damaged buildings and struggling to survive in makeshift shelters and extreme cold.

Relief organizati­ons typically scramble to find survivors in the first 72 hours after a natural disaster, as the passing of time exponentia­lly diminishes hope for finding signs of life. In the past week, more than 35,000 Turkish search and rescue teams joined thousands of internatio­nal workers to dig through the rubble, according to AFAD, Turkey’s emergency management agency.

In recent days, desperatio­n has increasing­ly set in as the rescue missions have turned to recovery, a humanitari­an crisis has taken shape, and hard-hit and hard-to-reach Syrian towns have lamented that they have been forgotten.

On Tuesday, as the total death toll in both Syria and Turkey surpassed 40,000, Turkish authoritie­s arrested more contractor­s suspected of shoddy constructi­on that violated building codes.

Critics of Erdogan, who is seeking to defend his response to the disaster, drew attention to videos that showed him previously hailing some of the housing projects that crumbled and buried people. And Turkish police detained scores of social media users on accusation­s of spreading panic-inducing posts.

But as Turkey’s National Defense Department and national broadcaste­rs shared footage of the rescues, the rare glimmers of good news were celebrated.

In the city of Adiyaman, in southeaste­rn Turkey, rescue workers in bright red and yellow hard hats and vests contrasted sharply with the dustcaked skin and hair of a young man they sought to free from the rubble.

After digging out the man, identified by state news agencies as Muhammed Cafer Cetin, 18, they hooked him up to an IV, fitted him with an oxygen mask, and wrapped him in a shimmering survival blanket.

They then delicately carried him in a stretcher over the debris under which he had been buried to an ambulance waiting to take him to the hospital. His condition was not immediatel­y clear. Another man, Ramazan Yucel, 45, was also rescued in the province, according to state news agency Anadolu.

Finally free, the exhausted Yeninar brothers emerged from the rubble, their eyes shut and their arms bound in stretchers as rescuers in fatigues and bright vests carried them away in Kahramanma­ras, near the epicenter of the quake.

Desperate for good news, the workers embraced one another and cheered as the brothers left for the hospital, where they explained how they had survived to the news media.

 ?? AAREF WATAD/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? A Syrian child sold cotton candy in Syria’s rebel-held village of Atarib, in the northweste­rn Aleppo province, on Tuesday.
AAREF WATAD/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES A Syrian child sold cotton candy in Syria’s rebel-held village of Atarib, in the northweste­rn Aleppo province, on Tuesday.

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