Turkish Rescuers Find Last Quake Victims; Death Toll Rises to 41

Turkish Rescuers Find Last Quake Victims; Death Toll Rises to 41
Rescue workers carry a wounded man that was found alive in the rubble of a building destroyed on Friday's earthquake in Elazig, eastern Turkey, Saturday, Jan. 25, 2020. (Depo Photos via AP)
Reuters
1/28/2020
Updated:
1/28/2020

ANKARA, Turkey—Turkish emergency teams on Jan. 27 recovered the bodies of the last two missing earthquake victims from the rubble of a collapsed building, raising the death toll from a powerful tremor that hit eastern Turkey to 41.

The magnitude 6.8 earthquake that struck late on Jan. 24 also injured more than 1,600 people, authorities said. At least 45 survivors were pulled from the rubble.

Rescue teams on Jan. 27 drilled through the rubble in the eastern city of Elazig, trying to reach a missing 75-year-old woman and another person, as relatives waited nearby. Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu and Mehmet Gulluoglu, the head of the Turkish disaster management agency, later announced that their bodies were retrieved from the debris.

The body of a third missing person was pulled out of the same collapsed structure overnight.

Television footage showed scores of emergency workers gathered in a circle near the rubble to pray for the victims, before the search-and-rescue mission was formally called off.

The quake destroyed 76 buildings and damaged more than 1,000 others, forcing survivors to take refuge in tents, mosques, schools, sports halls, and student dormitories. Authorities warned people not to return to homes that could be unsafe.

The quake hit at 8:55 p.m on Jan. 24 in the city that’s 565 kilometers (350 miles) east of Ankara. It was followed by close to 950 aftershocks—21 of them with a magnitude of 4 or higher.

As overnight temperatures dropped to minus 5 degrees Celsius (23 degrees Fahrenheit), emergency teams set up more than 9,500 tents for displaced residents and distributed hot meals.

Soylu said authorities were setting up insulated container homes for up to 1,000 families left homeless by the quake. Work to construct some 2,000 permanent homes will begin in April, Turkey’s urbanization minister said.

Health Minister Fahrettin Koca said 86 people injured by the quake remained hospitalized on Jan. 27, 18 of them in intensive care.

Over the weekend, rescuers pulled out Ayse Yildiz, 35, and her 2-year-old daughter Yusra from the rubble of another toppled apartment building in Elazig. They had been trapped for 28 hours.

Another couple who survived were reunited with a Syrian student who had helped to dig them out.

“He is our hero and angel,” a weeping Dudane Aydin said of Mahmud al Osman.

Her husband Zulkuf said the student went to extraordinary lengths to get them out, especially when his wife’s leg was trapped by debris. With other workers holding the student by his legs, he stretched toward the woman and freed her.

Turkey’s Emergency and Disaster Management Presidency said close to 4,000 workers and 22 dogs have been involved in the search-and-rescue operation.

Earthquakes are frequent in Turkey, which sits atop two major fault lines.

The city of Elazig has been hit by fatal quakes before—a magnitude 6.0 earthquake killed 51 people there in 2010.

Turkey’s worst quake in decades came in 1999, when a pair of strong earthquakes struck northwest Turkey, killing about 18,000 people.

By Suzan Fraser