Search for family heirlooms ends as building crumbles in latest earthquake

Search for family heirlooms ends as building crumbles in latest earthquake

A Turkish man’s determined seek for his household relics got here to a sudden finish as his condominium constructing, already broken by the February 6 twin quakes, got here crashing down within the newest tremor.

ANTAKYA — When two back-to-back earthquakes devastated southern Türkiye on February 6, killing tens of hundreds of individuals and leaving cities and cities in rubble, Alpaslan Koseoglu, 42, escaped the catastrophe unscathed. 

His condominium advanced within the metropolis centre of Antakya in Hatay province was broken however withstood the magnitude 7.8 and seven.6 twin temblors, not like most different adjoining buildings, which have been decreased to mangled heaps of metal and concrete.

Hatay was among the many worst affected of the 11 provinces ravaged by the dual earthquakes that rocked southern Türkiye and elements of adjoining Syria. Out of the mixed dying toll of greater than 47,000 individuals, not less than 42,300 have been killed in Türkiye alone.  

After escaping the quakes together with his brother and sister-in-law, Koseoglu – in his 50s – returned every day to the still-standing constructing within the hope of retrieving something helpful, even sentimental worth.    “I was hoping to retrieve some family heirlooms like my grandfather’s ring and silverware that we proudly displayed in a showcase,” he tells TRT World

The tremors shattered home windows, tore down elements of the outside wall and broken the pillars, however his constructing nonetheless stood, giving him a false sense of hope that he may enter and get his stuff out.

The apartment building in which Alpaslan Koseoglu lived as it was after the February 6 earthquakes.
The condominium constructing wherein Alpaslan Koseoglu lived because it was after the February 6 earthquakes.
(Murat Sofuoglu / TRTWorld)

But then on February 20, a recent 6.4 magnitude earthquake hit near Hatay and Koseoglu’s constructing got here crumbling down. It is now only a heap of stones and iron-rebar particles. 

Across Antakya, whole streets have became mountains of concrete waste or ominously standing skeletal constructions – their home windows and fronts gone, damaged chandeliers dangling inside, a sofa about to fall off a fifth ground of what as soon as was somebody’s lounge, pages of a diary flying round in circles.

Alpaslan Koseoglu’s building after the February 20 earthquake.
Alpaslan Koseoglu’s constructing after the February 20 earthquake.
(Murat Sofuoglu / TRTWorld)

The district has became a ghost city as most of the residents have moved into AFAD shelters or travelled to be with their family members in different cities. 

Unimaginable devastation

In the town centre, the place supermarkets, shops and residential buildings have been as soon as testimonies to a bustling city centre, the one sounds one hears now are of emergency autos whisking by, their sirens shrieking, and items of glass shattering each time a gust of wind sweeps throughout. 

But the drive in the direction of Antakya, by the picture-postcard countryside and different barely-affected human habitations, offers little indication of the apocalyptic scenes forward.

In Iskenderun, a historic port metropolis stated to have been based by Alexander the Great, exhaust towers of an influence plant rise into the sky. Cargo ships heading in the direction of the port seem on the horizon. On the opposite facet of the highway, Amanos mountain is roofed with inexperienced forests. Blue and white box-like homes dot the idyllic panorama. 

Then the destruction begins to turn into seen. First, in short snapshots – a crack in a single constructing, a fallen chunk of plaster from one other – after which the scene unfolds in all its gory particulars. 

On the streets and beside them, there are extra excavators and dump vans than people. AFAD groups are nonetheless searching for our bodies in some areas whereas troopers patrol the streets –  checking identities and ensuring nobody tries to steal valuables left behind by the residents, from kitchen utensils to HD TVs. 

Koseoglu, who owns a farm close to the Syrian border, says he was fortunate to get out alive. More than 20 individuals died within the subsequent constructing within the February 6 earthquakes. 

“I am happy to be alive. I don’t worry about the fact that I lost everything,” he says. 

On February 22, Koseoglu watched excavators and bulldozers work on the particles, kicking off a thick layer of mud. 

Recognising the specter of aftershocks, the provincial authorities have banned residents from coming into the buildings, which have been designated as ‘heavily damaged’. All the extra cause for individuals to keep away from going close to buildings like Koseoglu’s. 

A close-by park on 16 Street off Ataturk Avenue has been transformed right into a makeshift camp for aid employees the place they eat and sleep. 

As the TRT World crew drove previous, the driving force of an excavator suggested warning, saying many buildings have been weak to break down within the occasion of an aftershock. 

On Yuzbasi Asim Avenue, a big momentary settlement for earthquake survivors with a whole lot of tents has been arrange. Inside, individuals have been utilizing firewood to run makeshift stoves to maintain themselves heat as aid teams like Greater Good distributed meals. 

Monday’s earthquake additionally shook Samandagi, one other district of Hatay province bordering the Mediterranean Sea. 

The catastrophe has pushed individuals right into a panic mode, and plenty of households are spending their nights exterior though their homes and residences haven’t been badly broken. 

Jozef Naseh, a 70-year-old Christian archaeologist, says he’s bored with the fixed nervousness. “I am an old man and maybe it’s easier for me to accept the prospect of a sudden death. But young people are full of hopes about their  future and don’t want to die suddenly.” 

“We want to move to a safer area like Antalya to make them feel better,” Naseh tells TRT World. Antalya is a well-liked tourism vacation spot, a whole lot of kilometres from the East Anatolian fault line, the place the latest earthquakes have originated. 

Since February 6, greater than 7,000 aftershocks have hit Türkiye’s southern area, placing individuals like Naseh on the sting. 

“All these tremors have just added to the trauma. Moving to safer areas might help us keep our sanity,” he says.

Source: TRT World

Source: www.trtworld.com