The Denver Post

Desperate earthquake survivors hunt for shelter

Many find refuge in caves, tents and shipping containers

- By Cora Engelbrech­t and Nimet Kirac

ANTAKYA, TURKEY>> Two weeks ago, Lutfiye Yuce hosted a 30th birthday party for her daughter Yesim in the southern Turkish city of Antakya. She bought an iced cake and invited a handful of neighbors.

Three days later, the neighbors returned in the middle of the night to untangle Yesim from under her home, which had caved into the shaking mountainsi­de that cradles the city.

“It was as if the ground was boiling,” said Yuce, 66, recalling how the earth shuddered as her son carried her daughter’s body down from the mountain.

She and her son sheltered in a cave for days before joining neighbors in a tent encampment beside an ancient monastery. They are among an estimated 1 million Turkish people left homeless by the earthquake this month that decimated a wide swath of Turkey and western Syria.

“I had everything, and I now I have nothing,” said Yuce, who noted that she had also lost a son in the earthquake. She has four surviving children, she said, and they are all homeless. “I can never return there again — but what can I do? I have nowhere to go.”

More than 40,000 people in Turkey died in the earthquake and a powerful aftershock. About 47,000 buildings were destroyed or damaged, sending more than 1 million people into temporary shelters, according to the Internatio­nal Rescue Committee. And millions more remain in need of food, shelter, electricit­y, water and toilets. Many have spent almost two weeks in the open air, sometimes braving freezing weather.

The Turkish government, along with relief workers from agencies like the Red Crescent and the UNHCR, the United Nations refugee agency, are scrambling to meet the herculean challenge of housing people across quake- stricken areas of Turkey.

A park in the city of Adiyaman has become a distributi­on point for survivors, packed with tents set up by the Turkish national emergency management agency, AFAD. The picnic areas are full of volunteers cooking giant vats of soup, while others hand out water, diapers, blankets, milk, cookies and nonperisha­ble food.

Resting under some trees was Erdal Akaslan and his wife, Selman Akaslan. The house where they lived with their three children had been damaged in the earthquake, so they were outside for a day before Erdal Akaslan found plastic sheeting and wood beams to build a makeshift tent in an empty lot. They had not been able to get an AFAD tent.

“I asked 50 times and could not get a tent,” he said.

Conditions are generally worse for many of the 3.6 million Syrian refugees who live in the quake zone in Turkey.

In the town of Besni, Mohammed Makhzoum, 31, said he, his wife and their three children had barely escaped their house during the earthquake. They met up with other Syrian families in their area, and many of them settled at the tree nursery where Makhzoum worked.

There were multiple families there, and he estimated that scores of women and children were packed into the nursery’s three- room building. For the first few nights, the men and boys stayed uncovered outside, but then the nursery owner brought them a large tent to sleep in.

They were in a small town and received no aid from the government.

In response to growing public frustratio­n over his government’s relief efforts, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said he intends to construct enough “highqualit­y and safe buildings within one year” to “meet the housing needs across the entire earthquake zone.”

For now, the government is relying on a raft of shortterm solutions: Repurposed shipping containers are popping up like impromptu trailer parks. Gymnasiums, hotels and university dormitorie­s have been packed with people. A cruise ship is set to arrive in the port city of Iskenderun to accommodat­e thousands of other Syrian refugees in Turkey.

The road out of Antakya offers a panorama of the outpouring of support for survivors. Cars piled with bags of clothing from local charities weave around tractors pushing debris. Mobile kitchens advertisin­g soup and tea trail ambulances and trucks stacked with sacks of rice and flour.

Across the ruined landscape, in parks and other open areas, tents and makeshift shelters displaying lettering from aid groups jut out from the rubble.

More formal camps have been set up by AFAD in parking lots throughout Antakya. They offer some of the best conditions those in the quake zone can hope for: The tents are made of thick, waterproof fabric and have wood or coalburnin­g heaters. But receiving a tent is a privilege not everyone is granted.

“We are only Turkish families here,” said Nedime Sahin, 24, who had been living for five days in an AFAD camp housing about 1,200 people outside a stadium. “There were Syrians before we moved in here, but they were forced to leave.”

Near the stadium, a young girl and boy pushed a cart of donated clothes and toys from a mosque to an olive grove, where an extended family of 150 Syrians had set up tents just beyond the shadow of the building complex where they once lived.

“AFAD refused to give us tents, so we made our own,” said Mohammed Kasim Khadijeh, 23. His family’s shelter was topped with rugs and tarpaulins. Spare furniture was set outside, along with pots and other belongings that Khadijeh had retrieved from his apartment.

“Life goes on,” said Khadijeh’s uncle, Sobhi Khadijeh, who escaped Syria’s civil war with his family eight years ago and had been working in constructi­on before the quake. Now he and his wife were eating only one meal a day to ensure their eight children had enough food. “There was a war in Syria. There was an earthquake in Turkey. But we are still alive.”

So far, at least 368,874 tents have been sent to the quake zone, of which 172,265 have been erected, AFAD said Thursday. The government has also repurposed 5,400 shipping containers for housing, and at least 890,000 people are being housed in staterun dormitorie­s and facilities. About 50,000 victims are in hotels, Erdogan said Tuesday.

In the city of Adana, about 80 miles from the quake’s epicenter, a vast network of gymnasiums, mosques and hotels have been transforme­d into shelters for tens of thousands of victims.

Omer Kahraman was one of hundreds of survivors who took refuge this past week at the Adana Garden Business Hotel.

“I am very pleased with Adana’s hospitalit­y,” he said as he lay amid a group of people gathered on cushions in the hotel’s softly lit ballroom. Kahraman said it had taken eight hours for rescue workers to extract him from the rubble of his six- story building in Kahramanma­ras.

He was flown to Adana by military helicopter so he could receive treatment for two broken legs. Others described being trapped in an infuriatin­g limbo, shuttled from place to place as they waited for officials to confirm that their homes were safe to return to.

“Last week, we were in a swimming pool; now we are in a gym,” said Dilek Tekerlek, 48, lying on a thin mattress in a corner of a gym where her family has slept for the past five days.

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