The Sentinel-Record

Search for earthquake survivors enters its final hours in Turkey

- MEHMET GUZEL, SUZAN FRASER AND SARAH EL DEEB

ADIYAMAN, Turkey — The desperate search for earthquake survivors in Turkey and Syria entered its final hours Monday as rescuers using sniffer dogs and thermal cameras surveyed pulverized apartment blocks for any sign of life a week after the disaster.

Teams in southern Turkey’s Hatay province cheered and clapped when a 13-year-old boy identified only by his first name, Kaan, was pulled from the rubble. In Gaziantep province, rescue workers, including coal miners who secured tunnels with wooden supports, found a woman alive in the wreckage of a five-story building.

Stories of such rescues have flooded the airwaves in recent days. But tens of thousands of dead have been found during the same period, and experts say the window for rescues has nearly closed, given the length of time that has passed, the fact that temperatur­es have fallen to minus 6 degrees Celsius (21 degrees Fahrenheit) and the severity of the building collapses.

The 7.8 magnitude earthquake and its aftershock­s struck southeaste­rn Turkey and northern Syria on Feb. 6, reducing huge swaths of towns and cities to mountains of broken concrete and twisted metal. The death toll has surpassed 35,000.

In some areas, searchers placed signs that read “ses yok,”

or “no sound,” in front of buildings they had inspected for any sign that someone was alive inside, HaberTurk television reported.

Associated Press journalist­s in Adiyaman saw a sign painted on a concrete slab in front of wreckage indicating that an expert had inspected it. In Antakya, people left signs displaying their phone numbers and asking crews to contact them if they found any bodies in the rubble.

The quake’s financial damage in Turkey alone was estimated at $84.1 billion, according to the Turkish Enterprise and Business Confederat­ion, a non-government­al business organizati­on. Calculated using a statistica­l comparison with a similarly devastatin­g 1999 quake, the figure was considerab­ly higher than any official estimates so far.

In other developmen­ts, Syria’s president agreed to open two new crossing points from Turkey to the country’s rebel-held northwest to deliver desperatel­y needed aid and equipment for millions of earthquake victims, the United Nations announced.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? ■ People sit next to a destroyed house as they wait for the bodies of friends and family members to be pulled from the rubble after an earthquake in Antakya, southeaste­rn Turkey, on Monday.
The Associated Press ■ People sit next to a destroyed house as they wait for the bodies of friends and family members to be pulled from the rubble after an earthquake in Antakya, southeaste­rn Turkey, on Monday.

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