Berliner Boersenzeitung - Turkey commemorates its worst disaster of modern times

EUR -
AED 4.297145
AFN 80.514189
ALL 97.785062
AMD 447.604669
ANG 2.093828
AOA 1072.828477
ARS 1490.487912
AUD 1.796502
AWG 2.108804
AZN 1.988028
BAM 1.957486
BBD 2.353467
BDT 141.762105
BGN 1.957455
BHD 0.441058
BIF 3473.584104
BMD 1.169933
BND 1.494998
BOB 8.054282
BRL 6.514886
BSD 1.165624
BTN 100.570924
BWP 16.653348
BYN 3.814451
BYR 22930.681112
BZD 2.341357
CAD 1.600836
CDF 3376.425952
CHF 0.932781
CLF 0.029099
CLP 1116.641972
CNY 8.395422
CNH 8.396338
COP 4721.052863
CRC 588.068828
CUC 1.169933
CUP 31.003217
CVE 110.364778
CZK 24.629434
DJF 207.352145
DKK 7.465247
DOP 70.496202
DZD 151.881856
EGP 57.362318
ERN 17.548991
ETB 161.976833
FJD 2.636797
FKP 0.866844
GBP 0.867107
GEL 3.170194
GGP 0.866844
GHS 12.181013
GIP 0.866844
GMD 83.65191
GNF 10113.062475
GTQ 8.952093
GYD 243.780396
HKD 9.183884
HNL 30.502317
HRK 7.535068
HTG 152.942585
HUF 399.224916
IDR 19090.669476
ILS 3.924416
IMP 0.866844
INR 101.064985
IQD 1526.941319
IRR 49268.786988
ISK 142.404159
JEP 0.866844
JMD 186.370616
JOD 0.829505
JPY 172.58438
KES 151.214174
KGS 102.310986
KHR 4675.747647
KMF 493.711538
KPW 1052.975712
KRW 1622.784363
KWD 0.357239
KYD 0.971353
KZT 617.952831
LAK 25138.082171
LBP 104436.540711
LKR 351.718962
LRD 233.701284
LSL 20.681067
LTL 3.454507
LVL 0.70768
LYD 6.326557
MAD 10.538027
MDL 19.809401
MGA 5184.110792
MKD 61.61307
MMK 2455.633802
MNT 4199.214209
MOP 9.423878
MRU 46.362962
MUR 53.220355
MVR 18.017096
MWK 2021.002574
MXN 21.866163
MYR 4.949397
MZN 74.828136
NAD 20.681067
NGN 1788.686529
NIO 42.894197
NOK 11.912752
NPR 160.896272
NZD 1.967184
OMR 0.449857
PAB 1.165654
PEN 4.156151
PGK 4.898906
PHP 66.715995
PKR 332.029338
PLN 4.252511
PYG 8864.787139
QAR 4.260652
RON 5.070255
RSD 117.185091
RUB 91.43491
RWF 1684.149859
SAR 4.388967
SBD 9.693004
SCR 17.057193
SDG 702.566756
SEK 11.210792
SGD 1.499748
SHP 0.919383
SLE 26.908132
SLL 24532.908576
SOS 666.002496
SRD 42.907303
STD 24215.245008
STN 24.519548
SVC 10.198959
SYP 15211.298754
SZL 20.672569
THB 37.80082
TJS 11.14908
TMT 4.106464
TND 3.424596
TOP 2.740098
TRY 47.28962
TTD 7.912951
TWD 34.446911
TZS 3035.975065
UAH 48.781282
UGX 4176.776129
USD 1.169933
UYU 47.062548
UZS 14660.878629
VES 136.841176
VND 30587.305732
VUV 138.951441
WST 3.084099
XAF 656.483176
XAG 0.030117
XAU 0.000345
XCD 3.161802
XCG 2.100645
XDR 0.816447
XOF 656.533722
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.895226
ZAR 20.669551
ZMK 10530.80464
ZMW 26.80855
ZWL 376.717855
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Advertisement Image
Turkey commemorates its worst disaster of modern times
Turkey commemorates its worst disaster of modern times / Photo: OZAN KOSE - AFP

Turkey commemorates its worst disaster of modern times

Turkey on Tuesday holds pre-dawn vigils for the loss of more than 50,000 people -- and parts of entire cities -- in the earthquake-prone country's deadliest disaster of modern times.

Advertisement Image

Text size:

Grieving Turks are still coming to terms with how a 7.8-magnitude tremor could upturn the lives of millions of people in a matter of seconds while they were still asleep.

An updated toll released Friday showed that 53,537 people had died across 11 southeaster provinces officially designated as the disaster zone.

The confirmed loss of 5,951 more lives in neighbouring Syria makes last year's February 6 earthquake one of the 10 deadliest in the world in the past 100 years.

Ancient cities such as Antakya have been effectively wiped off the map.

Others have gaping holes in place of apartment towers that toppled like houses of cards when the ground began to move at 4:17 am.

Shellshocked survivors stood outside in the freezing cold in their pyjamas and listened to those trapped under concrete slabs of debris scream in agonising pain.

"It's been a year, but it doesn't leave our minds," housewife Cagla Demirel told AFP in one of the container camps set up for hundreds of thousands of survivors in Antakya.

"Life has lost its spark," the 31-year-old said. "I have no family left to visit, no door to knock on, no pleasant place to be. Nothing remains."

- 'Can you hear us?' -

Antakya's remaining residents plan to gather on Tuesday at 4:17 am for a vigil that will see everyone cry out: "Can you hear us?"

The call became ubiquitous across the disaster zone as people searched for loved ones in the rubble.

But it also appears to be a nuanced reminder for President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's government that many in the quake zone feel left behind.

Analysts at the Economic Policy Research Foundation of Turkey (TEPAV) point out that the disaster struck an area already weighted down by unemployment and underinvestment.

"Some districts in the region have the highest poverty rate in Turkey," TEPAV said in a report.

Erdogan pushed back hard against complaints that government rescuers were unprepared and slow to respond.

He has branded the quake "the catastrophe of the century" that no nation could have averted or quickly overcome.

He crisscrossed the nation in the first weeks of the disaster and promised to deliver 650,000 new housing units within a year.

- 'No return to normal' -

He began to hand out keys in Antakya on Saturday for the first 7,000 apartments of the 46,000 ready to be delivered across the quake zone this month.

He said up to 20,000 units would be delivered monthly and 200,000 by the end of the year -- short of his initial promise but still impressive for a region hit by post-quake chaos.

"Of course, we cannot bring back the lives we lost, but we can compensate all the other losses," Erdogan told Antakya residents on Saturday.

"We made promises to do so."

But Erdogan's words offer little solace to people such as ice cream vendor Kadir Yeniceli.

The 70-year-old native of Kahramanmaras -- a hard-hit city where Erdogan's Islamic-rooted party enjoys overwhelming support -- said people feel "confused" about what happens next.

"There has been no return to normal," Yeniceli told AFP. "It remains the same, there is no progress. There is a lack of employment, there is a lack of money, there is a lack of income."

- 'Much to be done' -

Erdogan's housing pledges came in the runup to a May 2023 general election that turned into the toughest of his two-decade rule.

He prevailed in a runoff presidential ballot thanks to consistent support across much of the disaster zone.

Many voters expressed a lack of trust in the opposition and thought Erdogan's government was doing the best anyone could do under the circumstances.

But many voters and analysts point out that Turkey is no better prepared for another big shake than it was one year ago.

The country straddles two of the world's most active fault lines and is rattled almost daily by more minor quakes.

And hundreds of contractors are currently facing prosecution for allegedly skirting the building safety standards already in place.

"The country urgently needs to transition from crisis management to risk management," said Istanbul Technical University disaster management professor Mikdat Kadioglu.

"There is still much to be done."

(Y.Berger--BBZ)

Advertisement Image