Turkey earthquake: Rescue teams search for survivors

  • 11-10-2011

Rescue teams are searching for dozens of people trapped in rubble after a 5.6-magnitude earthquake struck eastern Turkey, killing at least seven people.

Twenty-five buildings have collapsed, including a six-storey hotel in the city of Van, where journalists and aid workers were staying, officials said.

Emergency workers said 23 people had been rescued alive but that up to 100 more remained unaccounted for.

Last month, a 7.2-magnitude quake in the same area killed 600 people.

There have been hundreds of aftershocks since that disaster and thousands of people are still camping out in tents in freezing conditions in the area.

All but three of the buildings which toppled in Wednesday's quake were empty, Turkey's deputy prime minister said, as they had been evacuated following the 23 October tremor.

Besir Atalay said that the rescue work was concentrating on those structures - two collapsed hotels and one apartment building.

'Weakened buildings'

The quake hit late on Wednesday at 21:23 (19:23 GMT) with its epicentre in the Edremit district, 16km (10 miles) south of Van, the US Geological Survey said.

Television pictures from Van showed residents and rescuers trying to lift debris to free people trapped under ruined buildings.

Rescue workers were using high-powered lights to work through the night.

Mr Atalay said rescue teams were being sent to the region from the capital, Ankara, and other areas.

He said the quake toppled a school and a number of mudbrick homes, as well as two hotels.

A member of the Turkish parliament, Nazmir Gur, told the BBC that people in the area were getting more desperate by the hour.

"The current situation is getting worse as people need tents," he said.

"As we heard from the governor and from the crisis centre unfortunately there are only very few thousands of tents. As we took a tour of a neighbourhood this morning everyone was asking for a small tent to save their children and women."

The BBC's Jonathan Head in Turkey says the city became the headquarters of the relief effort for the last quake, and has been flooded by aid workers and journalists.

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Reproduced under licence from BBC News © 2011 BBC


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