Turkey Rescue Operation Continues As Death Toll Hits 33,000

Reports reaching the desk of Africa Today News, New York has it that rescuers have managed to pull a seven-month-old baby out from the rubble of a building in Hatay, southern Turkey, 139 hours after last week’s deadly earthquake.

Africa Today News, New York reports that Cudie, a 12-year-old girl who had been trapped for 147 hours, was rescued elsewhere in Hatay.

The 13-year-old was reportedly saved in Gaziantep on Sunday, and the rescuers reportedly told him: ‘You are a miracle.’

More than 33,000 fatalities in Turkey and Syria have now been officially confirmed.

Since Friday, Syria has not released an updated death toll; therefore, the actual toll is probably higher.

Hopes are dwindling of finding many more survivors, and on the ground there is a sense that the rescue mission will soon end.

Read Also: 12 Detained By Turkey Over Collapsed Buildings After Quake

The Syrian Civil Defence Force, or White Helmets, which operates in in rebel-held areas of the country, has told the BBC that the group’s search efforts are winding down.

But tens of thousands of rescuers continued their search overnight across affected areas in Turkey and Syria.

The seven-month-old baby, Hamza, was saved on Saturday, and footage from local authorities showed rescuers cheering and hugging one another.

Separate video from the Turkish health ministry showed a small girl in a neck brace looking around as she was carried on a stretcher in the same province later on Sunday morning.

And footage showed a father and daughter being pulled from a building in Hatay. “He wants two cups of good tea,” one of the rescuers said.

But as the rescue operations wind down, the focus turns to recovery – and of reckoning with the situation.

Thousands of buildings collapsed during the earthquake, raising questions about whether the natural disaster’s impact was made worse by human failings.

Turkey’s President Erdogan has admitted shortcomings in the response, but, during one visit to a disaster zone earlier in the week, appeared to blame fate.

‘Such things have always happened,’ he said. ‘It’s part of destiny’s plan.’

Officials said they have issued 113 arrest warrants in connection with the construction of buildings that collapsed, with 12 people taken into custody, including contractors.

Rescuers in Syria have criticised the international response to the disaster, with the UN’s relief chief Martin Griffiths saying the world has “failed the people in north-west Syria”.

Africa Today News, New York

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