After the shock, it is a race against the clock to help the survivors which takes place in Turkey and Syria, victims Monday, February 6 of two violent earthquakes which left thousands dead.

If international aid begins to arrive, the difficult weather complicates the work of the rescuers.

Update on the situation 24 hours after the tragedy. 

Several thousand dead

According to the latest official report – which is likely to increase – nearly twenty hours after the first of the three tremors, with a magnitude of 7.8 felt as far away as Lebanon, Cyprus and northern Iraq, more 4,300 people were killed, including 2,921 in Turkey according to the public body for disaster management (Afad), and more than 1,440 in Syria.

Rescuers fought hard in the cold, in the pouring rain or snow, sometimes with their bare hands, to save every life that could be, like this seven-year-old child who came out of the ruins in Hatay (south), on the border Syrian, under the eyes of AFP, after more than 20 hours of terror, the pajamas stained with dust.

“Where is my mom?” she said to the rescuer who held her in his arms.

The bad weather that hangs over Anatolia complicates the task of rescue and makes the fate of the survivors even more bitter, shivering in tents or around improvised braziers.

International aid starting to arrive

International aid to Turkey should start arriving on Tuesday with the first teams of rescuers, from France and Qatar in particular.

US President Joe Biden has promised his counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan "all the help needed, whatever it is".

The French planned to go in particular to Kahramanmaras, epicenter of the first earthquake, a region difficult to access and deeply bruised buried under the snow.

Two American detachments of 79 rescue workers each were preparing to go there on Monday, according to the White House.  

According to the Turkish president, 45 countries have offered their help.

Russia arrives to help in Syria

On the other hand, in Syria, the appeal launched by the authorities in Damascus was mainly heard by its Russian ally, promising rescue teams "in the next few hours", while according to the army, more than 300 Russian soldiers are already on the ground. the places to help the emergency services. 

The UN also reacted, but insisted that the aid provided would go "to all Syrians throughout the territory", part of which is not under government control.

In these rebel-held areas, bordering Turkey in northwestern Syria, at least 700 dead have been counted.

Taking advantage of the chaos created by the earthquake, around 20 suspected fighters from the Islamic State (IS) group escaped from a military prison in Rajo, controlled by pro-Turkish rebels.

The balance sheets on both sides of the border have continued to increase and given the extent of the damage they should increase as the search progresses. 

In Turkey alone, the authorities have counted nearly five thousand collapsed buildings.

And the drastic drop in temperatures puts the wounded, stuck in the ruins, at an additional risk of hypothermia.

The World Health Organization has said itself that it expects the worst and fears "tolls eight times higher than the initial numbers".

Violent aftershocks all day

During the day on Monday, no less than 185 aftershocks were recorded, following the first two tremors: one of 7.8 which occurred in the middle of the night (04:17 local time), the other, of magnitude 7.5, at mid -day, both in southeastern Turkey.

Several aftershocks were recorded in the night, Tuesday before dawn.

The strongest, of magnitude 5.5, was recorded at 6:13 a.m. local time (3:13 a.m. GMT) 9 km southeast of Gölbasi (south).

Dormitories have been opened by the local authorities in gymnasiums or colleges or even in mosques to accommodate the survivors.

But for fear of new earthquakes, many residents preferred to spend the night outside, as in Sanliurfa, in southeastern Turkey.

“Who is not afraid? Everyone is afraid!”, assured Mustafa Koyuncu, 55, crammed with his wife and five children in the family car.

This earthquake is the largest in Turkey since the earthquake of August 17, 1999, which caused the death of 17,000 people, including a thousand in Istanbul.  

The Turkish head of state has declared national mourning for seven days and the closure of schools for the week.

With AFP

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