
A man sits in the debris of a collapsed building after an earthquake in Ercis on October 26, 2011
Alexander Christie-Miller / Gedik Bulak
October 27 2011 12:01AM
Amid chaotic scenes in the quake-struck cities of eastern Turkey, the country’s Government is increasingly being accused of botching its response to the crisis.
As Ankara reversed its controversial decision to reject foreign aid offers, it emerged that survivors had been forced to dig their dead from the rubble in villages that remained untouched by the aid effort, despite being only metres from major highways. Angry crowds have looted aid trucks, and many faced a fourth freezing night without shelter.
The officil death toll rose to 481, with more than 1,600 injured, but the Red Crescent aid organisation said that “hundreds, possibly thousands” were still trapped under the rubble.
The catastrophe risks becoming a personal embarrassment for the Prime Minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who has sought to transform Turkey into a major regional power.
Yesterday, the normally combative Mr Erdogan admitted “failures” in the aid effort. “We accept that there were some failures within the first 24 hours,” he told party officials in Ankara.
But he denied that the problems stretched beyond failing to provide tents promptly to the tens of thousands unable to return to their homes.
In Gedik Bulak, a village about 40 miles from the city of Van, near the epicentre of the quake, The Times witnessed the devastation and the neglect that followed. Every home in the community of 2,000 was either destroyed or damaged beyond repair, according to Idris Ileri, the village headman. But it was only yesterday that emergency services arrived. “We have ten dead and 70 injured,” he said. “So far, we’ve only been given 60 tents. We need far more.”
Haydar Ileri, a 41-year-old farmer, said the quake not only destroyed his home and livelihood, but also killed his daughter. Like nearly everyone in the village, he is furious with the Government. “If they do not help, I really don’t know how I will survive. I will be homeless,” he said. In nearby Guvecli, Ahmet Yayin said: “We recovered our relatives’ bodies from the wreckage by our own means, by shovels and digging tools.”
Standing in a queue of more than 1,000 people waiting to be given tents in Ercis, Nesri Ketmen, 27, said he had been sleeping outside for three nights with only a blanket and a fire.
“Last night it was snowing,” he said. “But there is nothing we can do. And we know it is only going to get colder.” Later, many returned home after hearing that the supply of tents had run out.
Such scenes have fuelled condemnation of Ankara’s hasty decision to turn down a flood of foreign aid offers, which it reversed yesterday by issuing an international appeal. Israel is now sending prefabricated homes.
The crisis affecting the predominantly Kurdish region of Van has also exposed ugly rifts between the ethnic communities. Before the quake, many Turks were angry at last week’s assault by Kurdish rebels that killed 24 soldiers. Some commented on social media sites that the disaster was God’s “payback” for the attack.
“They are ignoring us because we are Kurds,” said Feyzullah Yildiz, a villager in Gedik Bulak. “The Government only look after their own people, we vote BDP and so they ignore us.”
Others praised the relief efforts, however, and Mr Erdogan, said yesterday: “We did not discriminate between Turks, Kurds or Zaza people . . . we said they are all our people.”
Help across divisions
· The “earthquake diplomacy” phrase was first used after quakes hit Turkey and Greece in 1999. Despite frosty relations, each sent rescue teams to help the other and it was seen to start an era of more friendly relations
· In 2003, after the earthquake in Bam, Iran, the US temporarily eased its sanctions and sent relief teams to help. It had little effect on US-Iran relations but at the time it was seen as a potential breakthrough
· After the 2008 quake in Sichuan, Beijing invited Japanese troops into China for the first time since the end of the Second World War to help with relief efforts. After the disaster in Japan this year, the Chinese authorities sent a 15-man rescue team and about £2.5 million of aid