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Many Turkey quake victims hungry as winter hampers aid efforts

Remi Banet - Agence France-Presse
Many Turkey quake victims hungry as winter hampers aid efforts
Rescuers and civilians look for survivors under the rubble of collapsed buildings in Kahramanmaras, close to the quake's epicentre, the day after a 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck the country's southeast, on February 7, 2023. Rescuers in Turkey and Syria braved frigid weather, aftershocks and collapsing buildings, as they dug for survivors buried by an earthquake that killed more than 5,000 people. Some of the heaviest devastation occurred near the quake's epicentre between Kahramanmaras and Gaziantep, a city of two million where entire blocks now lie in ruins under gathering snow.
AFP / Adem Altan

SANLIURFA, Turkey — In the Turkish city of Sanliurfa, survivors of the massive quake that has wreaked death, destruction and havoc on the region face an invisible but powerful threat — hunger.

As the morning sun illuminates the sky, Sanliurfa's cracked streets look empty. The mercury is only just above freezing, but it feels much colder.

Like their neighbours in the other nine provinces hit by Monday's 7.8-magnitude quake and its frightening aftershocks, the people of Sanliurfa are focused on basic survival.

Turkey's most powerful quake in almost 100 years had struck this remote border region with Syria in the early hours on Monday, killing more than 5,000 people in Turkey and neighboring Syria.

Dozens of Sanliurfa families found refuge in the imposing Hilton hotel's ground floor.

Early on Tuesday, most of the parents huddling with their children have not slept a wink.

"We arrived here at 3:00 pm yesterday, the hotel gave us soup in the evening, but the night has passed. We're hungry, and the children too," said Imam Caglar, 42.

"The bakeries will be closed today, I don't know how we will find bread," the father of three said.

It's out of the question to go fetch food from his flat, located a few streets away, because of the danger that the building might suddenly crumble.

"We live on the first floor out of three, we're too scared to return," he says, shaking his head. "Our building is not safe at all."

Winter hampers response

The Turkish government is scrambling to house people forced into the street after their homes either collapsed or were too risky to stay in because of the aftershocks.

Hundreds of thousands spent the night in dormitories, schools, mosques and other public buildings, while others sheltered in hotels that opened their doors for free.

Supplying them with food and other basic aid has been a challenge.

A winter storm has made the region's roads, some of them heavily damaged by the tremors, nearly impassable. Many local airports are shut, their runways in need of repair.

"We had a small bowl of soup, that's not enough," says Mehmet Cilde, 56, a father of six.

He hopes that the local municipality will eventually provide food. But, he admits, "we have no information, nothing".

'Nothing but blankets'

The situation is even more dire for Filiz Cifci.

She missed the soup distribution on Monday evening, further along the street from the Hilton hotel.

Cifci and her three children, who fled their home before dawn Monday with only their three blankets and phones, preferred to skip a meal than wait in the wind and cold rain.

"We only had tea and coffee yesterday evening, nothing else," she said, in a headscarf and purple tunic, sitting close to the hotel's bathroom, where families get drinking water.

She doesn't know if her children will have enough to eat on Tuesday and in the coming days.

"For now we have nothing but our blankets," she said.

She paused, then added: "At least here, the water is drinkable."

EARTHQUAKE

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