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DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Teenager saved days after Turkey quake as toll reaches 550
by Staff Writers
Ercis, Turkey (AFP) Oct 27, 2011

Saudi offers $50 million in Turkey quake aid
Riyadh (AFP) Oct 27, 2011 - Saudi Arabia announced on Thursday it will donate $50 million dollars in aid to Turkey's quake victims, the kingdom's official SPA news agency reported.

A statement said King Abdullah had given orders to help "its sister nation" Turkey in its efforts to deal with the devastation of the quake.

The 7.2 magnitude earthquake that hit the eastern Turkish province of Van on Sunday has left 524 people dead and at least 2,300 others injured, with many more still missing.

Azerbaijan rescuers help Turkey quake search
Ercis, Turkey (AFP) Oct 27, 2011 - A team of rescue workers from neighbouring Azerbaijan pledged Thursday to carry on with their quest to find survivors of Turkey's devastating earthquake until they had exhausted all hope.

While the Turkish government initially shunned must outside offers of help, assistance from the 150-strong team from Azerbaijan was gratefully received and they managed to get to the quake zone faster than many homegrown teams.

"We arrived here soon after the earthquake, even faster than those who came from Istanbul," one of the Azerbaijan rescuers, 24-year-old Ramil Aliyev, told AFP in the worst-hit town of Ercis.

"Turkey's pain is our pain. We have been deeply saddened by what we have seen here," he added.

More than 500 people are now known to have died since Sunday's 7.2 magnitude quake with its epicentre in the mainly Kurdish eastern province of Van.

"My team has recovered 18 survivors from the rubble but mostly we have been bringing out bodies," added Aliyev.

"I don't know exactly how long we'll stay but... but we will be here until we have managed to go through all the wreckage."

One of his colleagues said that while there had been one moment of joy, most of their discoveries had been grim.

"My team recovered one survivor and nine dead bodies," said 32-year-old Hamit Hasanov.


Snow blanketed quake-hit eastern Turkey Thursday, while emergency crews found a teenager alive in the rubble more than 100 hours after the disaster even as the death toll climbed to 550.

Aydin Palak, 18, was pulled out of the wreckage in town of Ercis, which took the full brunt of the quake, media reports said.

Television footage showed emergency workers carrying him to an ambulance over their shoulders on a stretcher.

Palak's rescue came after rescuers saved a 19-year-old earlier on Thursday, although prospects of finding more people alive were fading fast, and some rescue teams have started to leave the region, the Anatolia news agency said.

Late Thursday, the emergency situations management reported that 550 people had died after the quake, some 15 more than reported earlier, and 2,300 people were injured.

A total of 186 people had been pulled alive from the wreckage, officials said.

After the government acknowledged failings in the initial rescue efforts, help from abroad was beginning to arrive, including an aid plane from Israel and Armenia.

And Saudi Arabia pledged to donate $50 million in aid to the quake victims, the kingdom's official SPA news agency reported.

But in a sign of the disillusionment with the help they had received so far, some families who had been staying in tents began returning to their homes despite warnings that they were still at risk of collapse from aftershocks.

Many families have been forced to sleep in overcrowded tents or even out in the open around fires as the temperatures dropped to below freezing, while some locals complained that aid was not being distributed fairly.

A tent city has arisen around the government-built apartment blocks near Ercis, although the buildings survived the earthquake with minor damage.

A 41-year-old taxi driver, Mujdat Yilmaz, whose house collapsed, said he had not been able to get hold of a tent since Sunday.

"I've been waiting in the queue at several spots since the quake occurred but I couldn't get any," he said, while waiting in the line in Ercis.

Red Cresecent head Ahmet Lutfi Aker told NTV news channel that 27,500 tents had been brought in to Van.

A separate 5.4 magnitude quake on Thursday morning struck the southeastern town of Yuksekova, near the Iraqi border, over 200 kilometres (120 miles) southeast of Van, although no damage was reported and experts said it involved a different faultline.

With hopes in Van of finding anyone else alive receding, the focus was shifting to how to help survivors.

The arrival of an Israeli plane carrying five pre-fabricated homes to provide shelter was a powerful symbol of the change of heart by the Turkish government which had initially refused help from abroad.

Relations between Turkey and Israel have been toxic in the wake of a deadly raid by Israeli commandos last year on an aid vessel bound for the Gaza Strip.

"Three more planes loaded with aid supplies will come to Turkey within two days," Nizar Amer, an official from the Israeli embassy in Ankara, told Anatolia.

Foreign ministry spokesman Selcuk Unal on Thursday said diplomatic relations with Israel and humanitarian aid were separate issues, Anatolia reported.

Unal said 14 countries as well as United Nations bodies would send help to Turkey, including Britain, France, Russia, Jordan and Belgium.

A Saudi statement said King Abdullah had given orders to help "its sister nation" Turkey in its efforts to deal with the devastation of the quake.

A 150-person rescue team from Azerbaijan was already in the quake zone, the first foreign team to arrive.

An Armenian plane carrying 40 tonnes of emergency supplies including tents, sleeping bags and blankets was set to take off late Thursday, officials in Yerevan said.

Relations between Yerevan and Ankara have suffered for years over Turkey's refusal to recognise the World War I-era mass killings of Armenians as genocide.

After widespread overnight snowfall in the region, forecasters said the weather pattern would remain the same until the end of the week.

Huseyin Celik, deputy head of the governing Justice and Development Party (AKP), said that the earthquake had affected 700,000 people in the region and up to 115,000 tents were needed.

The prosecutor's office in Ercis meanwhile began an investigation into the construction companies that put up the collapsed buildings, Anatolia said.

In Van province 3,713 buildings, home to 5,250 families, had been destroyed, the prime minister's emergency unit said.

There have been frequent complaints among residents of the mainly Kurdish region that the Ankara government would have acted faster if disaster had struck elsewhere.

"We did not discriminate between Turks, Kurds or Zaza people.... We said that they are all our people," Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Wednesday as he defended his government's handling of the aid operation.

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Armenia to aid foe Turkey after quake
Yerevan (AFP) Oct 27, 2011 - Armenia is to airlift aid to Turkey to help survivors of the devastating earthquake despite decades of enmity between the two neighbours, officials said on Thursday.

An Armenian plane carrying 40 tonnes of emergency supplies including tents, sleeping bags and blankets was set to take off late Thursday, the emergency situations ministry in Yerevan said in a statement.

The ministry said that Turkey had officially requested the aid from Armenia.

Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian on Sunday offered his Turkish counterpart Abdullah Gul assistance and condolences after the quake which has killed more than 500 people.

"I was saddened to learn the news about the loss of human lives, the devastation and people buried under debris that resulted from the earthquake," Sarkisian said in his message to Gul, which was posted on his website.

Relations between Yerevan and Ankara have suffered for years over Turkey's refusal to recognise the World War I-era mass killings of Armenians as genocide.

Turkey calls on EU for quake-relief aid
Brussels (AFP) Oct 27, 2011 - Turkey has called for EU help in the relief effort after Sunday's 7.2-magnitude earthquake that killed at least 530 people, the European Commission said Thursday.

"The Turkish authorities, the Red Crescent and the numerous volunteers... have asked us to join their effort to care for the survivors and Europe is ready to contribute," said Kristalina Georgieva, European Commissioner for crisis response.

Turkey "requested the activation of the European Civil Protection Mechanism," and six states -- Austria, Belgium, Britain, France, Slovenia and Sweden -- offered some 1,200 special winter-weather tents to house families.

A handful of experts have also been despatched to south-eastern Turkey, where more than 2,200 buildings have been damaged and another 1,300 people at least were reported injured.

The EU and Turkey have for years been engaged in negotiations about Ankara joining the bloc, but these have stalled over problems relating to EU member Cyprus, the divided island part-held by Turkey.

There has also been growing unease shown by the leaders of France and Germany over enlargement to include a massive, mainly Muslim emerging economic and strategic power.

UN sends thousands of tents to aid Turkey quake victims
Geneva (AFP) Oct 27, 2011 - The United Nations said Thursday that it has sent thousands of tents to Turkey for those made homeless by the deadly 7.2-magnitude earthquake, after an appeal from Ankara for relief.

"Following the government call for international assistance in the form of tents and prefabricated houses, OCHA has donated 400 family-sized tents which arrived in Erzurum last night," said Elisabeth Byrs, spokeswoman for the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.

"Erzurum has been identified as the receiving hub of international assistance coming in by air," she said.

In addition, the UN refugees agency has donated 4,000 tents, 50,000 blankets and 10,000 bed mats while the UN Population Fund has given 250 tents.

As snow blanketed eastern Turkey, many families have been forced to sleep in overcrowded tents or even out in the open around fires as the temperatures drop to below freezing.

Some families who had stayed in tents even began returning to their homes despite warnings that they were still at risk of collapse from aftershocks.

Besides the cold, the population was also facing water access problems, Byrs noted.

"The first cases of diarrhoea and pneumonia are emerging. We are worried about this," she added.



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DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Looting in Turkey as quake survivors seethe over aid
Ercis, Turkey (AFP) Oct 26, 2011
Desperate survivors of Turkey's devastating earthquake looted truckloads of aid supplies as Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan acknowledged failures Wednesday in the relief effort. As night-time temperatures dropped to below zero and snow was forecast to fall overnight, authorities were in a race against time to provide some form of shelter for the thousands of people who faced another nigh ... read more


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