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Showing posts with label Turkey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Turkey. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Turkey supported the call leader of PKK

The Prime Minister Of Turkey, Recep Tayiyip Erdogan (Between)

The time has come for the army to move to steer beyond the border (Turkey)
Ankara (Reuters)-Turkey's Government supports the shout Kurdishtan Workers Party leader (PKK), Abdullah Ocalan, to end fighting

"Abdullah Ocalan's call was a" positive step "," said Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Thursday (21/3).

Erdogan, who was visiting the Netherlands, told reporters that "it is important to practice" in the field.

As soon as peace protests took place, the atmosphere in Turkey and the region will change, said the Prime Minister of Turkey.

If there are no more armed activities of members of the PKK, Turkey security forces will not conduct military operations, Erdogan said, as reported by Xinhua.

On Thursday morning, armed members of the organization called for Ocalan to leave the region, thereby encouraging Turkey's hope for the end of a three-decade insurgency of the Kurdish organization.

"The time has come for the army to move to steer beyond the border (Turkey)," said Ocalan, who is imprisoned, in the letter read by a member of Parliament from pro-Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party (BDP) Pervin Buldan and Sureyya Onder Sirry during the Newroz spring festival in the city of Diyarbakir--the majority of the inhabitants are Kurds.

The PKK, which is inserted into the list of the terrorist organization by Turkey and several other countries, took up arms in 1984 in an attempt to establish the State of ethnic groups in South-Eastern Turkey. Since then, as many as 40,000 people have been killed in conflicts involving the group.
(C003)



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Tuesday, March 19, 2013

PKK prisoners in Turkey and eight Northern Iraq

Cizre, Turkey (Reuters)-Guerrillas of the Kurdistan Workers ' Party (PKK) frees eight people Wednesday of Turkey that they hold it for two years in northern Iraq, said a Kurdish official told AFP.

The men were freed as part of a new peace push by Turkey's Government to end 29-year Kurdish insurgency led by the PKK, branded a terrorist group by much of the world community, the AFP report.

"We have accepted detainees safely," said Husamettin Zenderlioglu, a member of the democracy and peace Party (BDP) pro-Kurd who was part of the delegation to accept the inmates.

Zenderlioglu, which is in northern Iraq, deliver it to a AFP correspondent near Turkey's border with Iraq.

The eighth release of inmates, including the security apparatus and civil servants, made after a request from a jailed Kurdish leader, Abdullah Ocalan, who last month expressed its hope through the BDP's parliamentary members who visit that he wanted to see the prisoners were gathered together again with their families.

Officials started negotiations with Turkey on Ocalan last October, with the main purpose of disarming rebels who use bases in Iraq as a place to launch attacks against security forces in the southeastern region of Turkey.

According to a plan that covered government and Ocalan Ankara, PKK would end hostilities and withdraw fighters from Turkey-warriors as the beginning of disarmament, in exchange for greater rights for Kurds established in the Constitution.

The fugitive Ocalan was arrested in Kenya on February 15, 1999 in a secret operation Turkey after he was exiled from Syria, where he was based for a decade to organize the workers ' Party of Kurdistan (PKK).

The initial verdict against Ocalan death sentence converted to life imprisonment sentence on a prison island off the coast of Istanbul since 2002.

Each year the Kurdish demonstrators clashed with police to protest Turkey's arrest of their leader.

Turkey, the EU and the u.s. considers the Kurdistan Workers ' Party (PKK) as a terrorist organization.

Turkey's military launched air attacks and ground operations are limited to the northern Iraq since August 2011 following the wave of attacks, the PKK guerrillas after the traffic-jammed a ceasefire before.

The PKK launched attacks from their hiding places in the remote mountains of Iraq as part of their war to gain greater rights and autonomy for the Kurdish population.

More than 40,000 people have died since the PKK took up arms in 1984. (M014)



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Friday, March 8, 2013

Turkey Kurdish guerrillas attack jets in Iraq

Diyarbakir, Turkey (Reuters)-Turkey sent several fighter jets across its borders with Iraq to attack the guerrillas of the Kurdistan Workers ' Party (PKK), said a local military sources Thursday.

The Jets bombarded targets in the mountainous 12 Candlesticks in the autonomous community of Kurdistan, Iraq, on Wednesday, the source said told AFP without a description of the victim.

Office of the pro-Kurdish Firat News confirmed the incident, saying the attack aimed at the two villages and destroyed many farms and orchards.

The attack was carried out when peace negotiations began between Ankara and the PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan, who is serving life in prison.

Turkey is hoping that negotiations will produce a cease-fire and an end to the Kurdish rebellion that has lasted almost three decades in the southeastern region of the country.

Last month, Turkey's army declared, they killed 14 guerrillas in the town of Hakkari, southeastern Turkey, when they were preparing to attack a border post. A soldier also died in Turkey clash that ensues.

Ankara declared, using the guerrillas hiding in northern Iraq to infiltrate Turkey and do second-half attacks-fled to the security forces.

Turkey Intelligence Agency began talks with PKK leaders again imprisoned, Abdullah Ocalan, late last year, with the main purpose of disarming rebels who use bases in Iraq as a place to launch attacks against security forces in the southeastern region of Turkey.

The justice and Development Party (AKP) which ruled stronghold of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan urged Turkey to end the Kurdish conflict, which has lasted almost three dasarwarsa.

The fugitive Ocalan was arrested in Kenya on February 15, 1999 in a secret operation Turkey after he was exiled from Syria, where he was based for a decade to organize much of the PKK.

The initial verdict against Ocalan death sentence converted to life imprisonment sentence on a prison island off the coast of Istanbul since 2002.

Each year the Kurdish demonstrators clashed with police to protest Turkey's arrest of their leader.

Turkey, the EU and the u.s. considers the Kurdistan Workers ' Party (PKK) as a terrorist organization.

Turkey's military launched air attacks and ground operations are limited to the northern Iraq since August 2011 following the wave of attacks, the PKK guerrillas after the traffic-jammed a ceasefire before.

The PKK launched attacks from their hiding places in the remote mountains of Iraq as part of their war to gain greater rights and autonomy for the Kurdish population.

More than 40,000 people have died since the PKK took up arms in 1984.

(M014)



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Friday, March 1, 2013

PM urges Turkey support negotiations with the Kurds

Ankara (Reuters)-Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan Sunday asked residents in the southeastern region of the country that the majority of Kurds to support peace negotiations with outlawed group PKK.

"We have started a process ... to provide opportunities for a political settlement. As long as you support us, then we will deal with this issue for sure, "said Erdogan told party supporters in the town of Midyat, which has a population of Kurdish ethnic mix, Turkey and Arabic, AFP reported.

"' Isha ' God, we will address these issues as long as you help us by your prayers," he said in a televised statement, pointing at the rebellion launched by the outlawed Kurdistan Workers ' Party Group (PKK) in 1984.

Turkey Intelligence Agency began talks with PKK leaders again imprisoned, Abdullah Ocalan, late last year, with the main purpose of disarming rebels who use bases in Iraq as a place to launch attacks against security forces in the southeastern region of Turkey.

The justice and Development Party (AKP), which came to power in order to end the stronghold of Erdogan urged the Kurdish conflict, which has lasted almost three dasarwarsa.

The fugitive Ocalan was arrested in Kenya on February 15, 1999 in a secret operation Turkey after he was exiled from Syria, where he was based for a decade to organize the workers ' Party of Kurdistan (PKK).

The initial verdict against Ocalan death sentence converted to life imprisonment sentence on a prison island off the coast of Istanbul since 2002.

Each year the Kurdish demonstrators clashed with police to protest Turkey's arrest of their leader.

Turkey, the EU and the u.s. considers the Kurdistan Workers ' Party (PKK) as a terrorist organization.

Turkey's military launched air attacks and ground operations are limited to the northern Iraq since August 2011 following the wave of attacks, the PKK guerrillas after the traffic-jammed a ceasefire before.

The PKK launched attacks from their hiding places in the remote mountains of Iraq as part of their war to gain greater rights and autonomy for the Kurdish population.

More than 40,000 people have died since the PKK took up arms in 1984. (M014)



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Sunday, February 24, 2013

Kurdish demonstrators were killed by their own granatnya in Southeast Turkey

Diyarbakir, Turkey (Reuters)-A 19-year old Kurdish man was killed Sunday when a late night grenade exploded in his hand during Assembly demonstration in southeastern Turkey, which has a Kurdish majority, said local authorities on Monday.

The man was among 100 protesters who gathered in the city of Diyarbakir to protest ahead of the commemoration of the anniversary of the arrest of the Kurdish leader 14, Abdullah Ocalan, in Kenya on February 15, the AFP report.

He was preparing to throw the grenade the police when the gun went off in his hand, said Diyarbakir's Governor Mustafa Toprak, was quoted as saying the Government television channel TRT.

"He also suffered wounds in his ear, which makes us think that the grenade exploded when he was trying to throw it," said Toprak.

However, a number of witnesses who cited the network of pro-Kurdish Firat News said, the man was hit by a police armored vehicle during the protests.

"I don't see it brings something in his hand. But (the police) vehicles were speeding down the road, melindasnya, "said a shop owner who witnessed the events.

The investigation about the death of these men will continue to be done, the Governor said.

Ocalan, who was then a fugitive arrested in Kenya on February 15, 1999 in a secret operation Turkey after he was exiled from Syria, where he was based for a decade to organize the workers ' Party of Kurdistan (PKK).

The initial verdict against Ocalan death sentence converted to life imprisonment sentence on a prison island off the coast of Istanbul since 2002.

Each year the Kurdish demonstrators clashed with police to protest Turkey's arrest of their leader.

Turkey, the EU and the u.s. considers the Kurdistan Workers ' Party (PKK) as a terrorist organization.

Turkey's military launched air attacks and ground operations are limited to the northern Iraq since August 2011 following the wave of attacks, the PKK guerrillas after the traffic-jammed a ceasefire before.

The PKK launched attacks from their hiding places in the remote mountains of Iraq as part of their war to gain greater rights and autonomy for the Kurdish population.

More than 40,000 people have died since the PKK took up arms in 1984. (M014)



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Saturday, October 29, 2011

Boy, 13, saved after Turkey quake

28 October 2011 rescuers drag the teenager from the collapsed building stand 09: 09 GMT

A 13-year-old boy were removed alive from the rubble in southeastern Turkey, 108 hours after an earthquake of the city devastated.

The injured boy was rescued from a collapsed building in the Ercis.

Just hours earlier a man from a flat building was freed and brought to the hospital.

The Turkish authorities say now 570 people are known, died on Sunday 7.2 magnitude quake have – more than 2,500 were injured.

So far 187 people were rescued, but hundreds are still missing and hopes fade to find more survivors.

The rescue and aid have snow and rain hampered efforts.

The rescued boy, found with the name Ferhat Tokay, late on Thursday in the life and moved from search teams early Friday morning.

"We started digging and initially we saw his hand, then we began to him talk", said Baris Dogan, Member of the rescue team told of Reuters.

He said "my feelings are inexplicable - it was out as my son,".

Ozgur Yildiz, a friend of young told of Reuters: "we do not he would die--he is a strong child believe." "I feel so good now, and I would like him to get well soon say."

Tents in Ercis, Turkey (27 Oct 2011)Thousands of people live in the open in bitter winter conditions

Rescue workers say Ferhat Tokay was taken to the hospital, but seems to be in good health.

Search crews continue to dig out the rubble of the building after the 13-year-old was rescued, search missing after several other people from the same block, which are intended.

However stopped work at some other sites as reducing the chances of someone alive.

Persons, the on

Pouring rain and in some places by the earthquake brought snow more misery, tens of thousands of people made homeless.

Although the authorities are working on a major flaw on tents, a fifth night in the open spent many people.

Large number of men are reported to stayed have any questions, the streets of Ercis, the worst hit city, with nowhere to go, that their families in what protection was available.

In the provincial capital, van, the humid conditions make too difficult also there for the people.

Homeless survivors spend the night outdoorsMany survivors have a fifth night in the open air, try to avoid getting too cold

Nimet, a mother of three, which damaged told of Reuters that she tried, back home was.

"It looks good from the outside, but it looks inside very unstable, with all the cracks in the walls." What choice do we have but to go back to our homes? ", you said"

"Last night it was raining and all our things are still wet." "I know not how many days that we can to stay in a tent."

Relief supplies were sent from several countries.

On Thursday, the aircraft were loaded with tents in Turkey from France, the Ukraine and Israel.



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Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Tremor 'sparks Turkey jail riot'

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25 October 2011 Last updated at 21:17 GMT Relatives of prisoners wait in front of a jail secured by riot police in the eastern Turkish city of Van Reports say the authorities refused to let inmates out after the aftershock in Van An aftershock has been blamed for sparking a riot in a Turkish prison in the eastern city of Van, one of the places worst hit by Sunday's devastating earthquake.

Eyewitnesses said flames and smoke billowed into the night sky and shots were heard.

The death toll from the disaster has risen to 459 people, officials said, as rescue teams continued to search for survivors.

Some 1,352 others were also injured.

Survivors have continued to be rescued, including a two-week-old baby, her mother and grandmother.

Meanwhile, the Turkish government has pledged more aid to the thousands made homeless and aid agencies have set up field hospitals and kitchens and distributed thousands of tents and blankets.

'Police fired tear gas'

The trouble at the Van prison is reported to have begun when a strong aftershock of 5.4 magnitude caused panic among the inmates.

Continue reading the main story image of Jonathan Head Jonathan Head BBC News, Ercis

The main street in Ercis has been transformed. Some of the buildings lean over at alarming angles, bits of debris dropping from them.

Then there are the mounds of concrete slabs, multifloor apartment blocks crushed down to the height of a single storey.

They are all swarming with orange-suited rescue workers, hammering and drilling, cranes standing by to lift the sawn-off hunks of masonry in the hope that someone may have survived in an air pocket.

Every so often, there is a call for silence. The drills, saws and generators stop, and one of the rescuers shouts into the rubble, listening intensely for any sounds of life.

Prisoners set fire to the jail and fought their guards because authorities refused to let them out, reports say.

Security forces surrounded the jail, from which a number of prisoners were reported to have escaped on Sunday.

Angry relatives gathered outside the prison as they tried to find out what was going on.

Speaking outside the prison, a pro-Kurdish member of parliament - Aysel Tugluk - said people wanted to know what had happened.

"From what we heard, prisoners in the jail asked permission to get some air, naturally, after an aftershock, because they were concerned.

"When they couldn't get permission, they reacted and fire broke out in the jail. That's what we were told. But we heard gunshots with our own ears and learned that police fired tear gas."

The Kandilli Observatory and Earthquake Research Institute said the epicentre of the aftershock was Degirmenozu, between Van and Ercis.

Extraordinary rescue

Rescue efforts have been continuing in the area.

In one extraordinary episode, three generations of the same family - a two-week-old baby, her mother and grandmother - were pulled out alive from the rubble in the town of Ercis, which was worst hit in the disaster.

However, hopes are fading for many more who remain unaccounted for, and Turkish officials warn that the death toll is likely to rise.

Survivors and opposition politicians have criticised the government for failing to provide enough supplies.

Turkey is particularly vulnerable to earthquakes because it sits on major geological fault lines.

Turkey earthquake map

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Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Quake rescuers save baby, Turkey requests aid

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The baby girl, rescued from a building that collapsed during an earthquake, rests in an incubator in a hospital in Ercis, near the eastern Turkish city of Van, in this still image taken from video footage October 25, 2011. Rescuers pulled the two-week-old baby girl alive from the arms of her mother buried under a collapsed building on Tuesday. REUTERS/Reuters TV

1 of 25. The baby girl, rescued from a building that collapsed during an earthquake, rests in an incubator in a hospital in Ercis, near the eastern Turkish city of Van, in this still image taken from video footage October 25, 2011. Rescuers pulled the two-week-old baby girl alive from the arms of her mother buried under a collapsed building on Tuesday.

Credit: Reuters/Reuters TV

By Jonathon Burch and Humeyra Pamuk

ERCIS, Turkey | Tue Oct 25, 2011 3:28pm EDT

ERCIS, Turkey (Reuters) - Rescuers pulled a two-week-old baby girl alive from a collapsed apartment block on Tuesday as they battled to find survivors of an earthquake in eastern Turkey that killed more than 400 people and made tens of thousands homeless.

The baby's mother and a grandmother were also brought out alive on stretchers to jubilant cries from onlookers who followed the dramatic rescue under cold, pouring rain.

"It's a miracle!" said Senol Yigit, the uncle of the baby, Azra, whose name means "purity" or "untouched" in Arabic. "I'm so happy. What can I say? We have been waiting for two days. We had lost hope when we first saw the building," he said sobbing.

However, hope of finding more people alive under the rubble faded with every passing hour as more bodies were found.

The death toll from Sunday's 7.2-magnitude quake rose to 459, with 1,352 injured, the Disaster and Emergency Administration said. The final count was likely to rise further as many people were still missing and 2,262 buildings had collapsed.

Thousands prepared to spend a third night in freezing temperatures in crowded tents or huddled around fires across a quake-prone region in Van province, near the Iranian border.

With the government facing criticism over shortages of tents and other relief items, Turkey requested prefabricated housing and tents from more than 30 countries, including Israel, a Foreign Ministry official told Reuters.

Ties between the two former strategic allies have been frayed since Israeli commandos killed nine Turks on board a Gaza-bound flotilla last year.

Many victims accused the central government of poor organization and of being slow in delivering aid to a region inhabited mostly by minority Kurds and home to a separatist insurgency against the Turkish state. Fighting broke out among desperate victims to grab tents from overwhelmed aid workers.

Spelling more trouble for authorities, gunshots were heard as prisoners set fire to a jail and fought with guards in Van, two days after a jailbreak in which 200 were reported to have escaped in the chaos after the quake.

The ruling AK Party has apologized for distribution problems. Urgency to offer shelters was heightened by worsening weather, with the first winter snow less than a month away.

"PUSHED BACK 100 YEARS"

"We have no tents, everybody is living outdoors. Van has collapsed psychologically, life has stopped. Tens of thousands are on the streets. Everybody is in panic," Kemal Balci, a construction worker, said as he awaited news of friends injured in the quake at a hospital in Van.

"Aid has been arriving late. Van has been reduced to zero. We have no jobs, no bread, no water and there are nine members in my family. If the government doesn't give a hand to Van it will be like Afghanistan. Van has been pushed back 100 years."

The quake, Turkey's most powerful in a decade, is one more affliction for Kurds, the dominant ethnic group in impoverished southeast Turkey, where more than 40,000 people have been killed in a three-decade-long separatist insurgency.

In an escalation of hostilities, Turkish warplanes struck targets overnight in northern Iraq, where the separatist militants have bases.

About 500 soldiers have crossed the border with armored vehicles following an attack last week by Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) fighters that killed 24 Turkish troops, security sources said.

Quake rescue efforts focused on Ercis, a town of 100,000 that was worst hit, and Van, the provincial capital, have been hampered by power cuts and by more than 500 aftershocks, including one with a magnitude of 5.4 on Tuesday.

"MIRACLE" BABY

Emergency workers extracted the infant girl from the wreckage two days after she was buried with her mother under an apartment block.

The mother was clutching the child to her chest when they were reached by rescuers, who then set about rescuing the mother and a grandmother who were also still alive.

"We're going to get them out soon," a rescuer assured the other grandmother, whose eyes brimmed with tears of joy at the survival of her grandchild, who was born prematurely.

Elsewhere, exhausted workers used machinery, jackhammers, shovels, pick axes and bare hands to comb through rubble. Every so often, they would shout for silence and generators and diggers would stop, straining to hear voices under rubble. Seconds later the drone of the machinery would start again.

The Turkish Red Crescent said it is preparing temporary shelter for about 40,000 people, although there are no reliable figures for the homeless.

SLOW RESPONSE

Officials said 12,000 more tents would reach Van on Tuesday for the neediest, particularly in villages.

"Life has become hell. We are outside, the weather is cold. There are no tents," said Emin Kayram, 53, sitting by a campfire in Ercis after spending the night with his family of eight in a van parked nearby. His nephew was trapped in the debris of a building behind him, where rescue workers dug through the night.

"He is 18, a student. He is still stuck in there. This is the third day but you can't lose hope. We have to wait here."

How fast Ankara manages to deliver aid and long-term relief to the survivors might have political consequences in a region plagued by poverty and the Kurdish insurgency, analysts said.

Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan, who won a third consecutive term with a strong majority in a June election, has promised to push reforms in parliament and rewrite the constitution to address long-time Kurdish grievances in an effort to end violence. Erdogan traveled to the region on Sunday, and President Abdullah Gul has also announced plans to visit.

"If we want to win the hearts of our brothers of Kurdish origin, we should act now. We should beat the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) with this approach, which is more effective than arms," leading analyst Mehmet Ali Birand wrote.

Fighting broke out among a crowd of around 200-300 people

after a truck arrived in Van city and started handing out tents next to a cemetery. Women were hit and kicked as people tried to force their way through to get access to the tents, while police tried in vain to establish order.

"There is absolutely no coordination, you have to step on people to get a tent," said jobless Suleyman Akbulut, 18.

"The prime minister runs for help when it's Palestine or Somalia, sends ships to Palestine, almost goes to war with Israel for the sake of Palestinians, but he doesn't move a muscle when it comes to his own people," said Emrullah, a young man of about 18.

(Additional reporting by Ece Toksabay; Writing by Ibon Villelabeitia, Daren Butler and Simon Cameron-Moore; Editing by Michael Roddy)



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Monday, October 24, 2011

Videos: Powerful 7.2-Magnitude Earthquake Rocks Eastern Turkey

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It was the nation's most powerful quake in at least a decade, and those that had cameras rolling as the earth trembled captured quite a harrowing scene.

Turkey is particularly prone to earthquakes, resting directly on a number of volatile fault lines. Sunday's earthquake, which initially measured 7.2 on the Richter scale, struck a mountainous, poor region of eastern Turkey. The epicenter, according to the USGS, was located 9 miles northeast of Van.

Ercis, a town of 75,000 near the Iranian border, was among the hardest hit by the quake. Turkish television shows buildings collapsed into piles of concrete, with rescuers flocking to the scene to dig through the rubble. Reports from Ercis put the initial death toll at 45. "There are so many dead. Several buildings have collapsed. There is too much destruction," Ercis mayor Zulfikar Arapoglu told NTV television. "We need urgent aid. We need medics."

According to the Turkish Red Crescent, 80 apartment buildings and a student dormitory collapsed in Ercis, on the north shore of Lake Van. Rescuers and citizens flocked to the building to pull out survivors. Ten buildings are reported to have fallen in Van, near the epicenter. A highway is also said to have caved in.

Sky Turk's coverage from Ercis shows people flooding the streets, many stunned by the scene that continues to unravel. Many who remained safe in the wake of the quake and its aftershocks immediately swarmed the buildings that collapsed, attempting to rescue any survivors.

A total of 60 bodies have been found so far, but that toll is expected to rise. Scientists were cautious in saying as many as 1,000 could have died in the violent temblor. "We are estimating a death toll between 500 and 1,000," Mustafa Erdik, head of the Kandilli observatory, told a televised news conference.

The quake, which struck at 10:41 a.m. local time, was listed at a depth of 12.4 miles. Aftershocks have continued to rock the region as the cleanup effort unfolded. The USGS reported up to eight aftershocks within three hours of the initial quake, measuring up to a magnitude of 5.6.

Nick Carbone is a reporter at TIME. Find him on Twitter at @nickcarbone. You can also continue the discussion on TIME's Facebook page and on Twitter at @TIME.

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Dozens die as quake rocks Turkey

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23 October 2011 Last updated at 22:27 GMT BBC reporter David O'Byrne: "There are people trapped under the rubble"

A strong quake has shattered buildings near the Turkish city of Van, killing at least 138 people and trapping an unknown number under rubble.

Casualties are reported to be particularly high in the town of Ercis, close to the Iranian border, where dozens of buildings fell.

Reports spoke of thousands of residents running screaming in the streets.

Fears rose of a death toll in the hundreds as rescuers worked into the night to find survivors.

Some were seen digging through rubble with shovels or their bare hands.

Turkey is particularly vulnerable to earthquakes because it sits on major geological fault lines.

Two earthquakes in 1999 with a magnitude of more than 7 killed almost 20,000 people in densely populated parts of the north-west of the country.

'One thousand buildings'

The earthquake struck at 13:41 (10:41 GMT) at a depth of 20km (12.4 miles), with its epicentre 16km north-east of Van in eastern Turkey, the US Geological Survey said.

It was followed by a series of powerful aftershocks, also centred north of Van, including two of magnitude 5.6 soon after the quake and one of 6.0 late on Sunday.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who is visiting the Van region, said 138 people had been killed, 45 of them in the town of Ercis and 93 in Van.

He said about another 350 people had been injured, but other officials gave higher casualty figures.

Up to 80 buildings, including a dormitory, collapsed in the town about 60km north of Van, while 10 fell in Van itself.

Town mayor Zulfikar Arapoglu appealed for help. "We need urgent aid, we need medics," he said.

Ambulances, soldiers and rescue teams rushed to the town, a Reuters photographer reported from Ercis.

Survivors complained of a lack of heavy machinery to remove chunks of cement floors that had pancaked on to each other, the Associated Press reports.

Serious damage and casualties were also reported in the district of Celebibag, near Ercis.

"There are many people under the rubble," said the local mayor, Veysel Keser.

"People are in agony, we can hear their screams for help. We need urgent help."

The head of Turkey's seismology institute said hundreds of people could have been killed.

"We estimate around 1,000 buildings are damaged and our estimate is for hundreds of lives lost - it could be 500 or 1,000," said Mustafa Erdik, general manager of the Kandilli Observatory.

Night search

As evening fell, residents of Van and Ercis lit camp fires, preparing to spend the night outdoors.

Map

Rescuers could be seen working by torchlight, using their hands and shovels.

Temperatures were expected to drop to near freezing overnight. The quake cut electricity and telephone lines and the authorities in some areas have cut gas to avoid the risk of fire.

The BBC's David O'Byrne, in Istanbul, said more search and rescue teams were being sent from other parts of the country.

Hakki Erskoy, from the Turkish Red Crescent, said aid teams from the north and east of Turkey were being sent to the earthquake-hit area.

He said camps were being set up to shelter people and blankets, food and water were being sent along with mobile kitchens.

Military aircraft were being deployed to help with the rescue and relief efforts, Mr Erskoy told BBC World News.

However, Turkey has rejected all offers of foreign assistance, a foreign ministry official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told Reuters.

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More than 100 dead after Turkey earthquake

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Rescue workers work to save people trapped under debris after an earthquake in Ercis, near the eastern Turkish city of Van, October 23, 2011. REUTERS/Osman Orsal

1 of 6. Rescue workers work to save people trapped under debris after an earthquake in Ercis, near the eastern Turkish city of Van, October 23, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Osman Orsal

By Jonathon Burch

VAN, Turkey | Sun Oct 23, 2011 8:43pm EDT

VAN, Turkey (Reuters) - More than 100 people were confirmed killed and hundreds more feared dead Sunday when a powerful earthquake hit southeast Turkey, flattening buildings and leaving survivors crying for help from under the rubble.

As a cold night fell, survivors and emergency workers battled to pull hundreds of people believed to be buried under debris in the city of Van and town of Ercis, where a student dormitory collapsed.

Residents in Van joined in a frantic search, using hands and shovels and working under floodlights and flashlights, hearing voices of people buried alive calling from under mounds of broken concrete in pitch darkness and freezing temperatures.

Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan, who traveled by helicopter to the area to see firsthand the scale of Turkey's worst earthquake in a decade, told a nationally televised news conference at least 138 people had been killed -- 93 in Van city center and 45 in Ercis. The toll was expected to rise.

"The most important problem now is in the villages close to Van city center because the buildings are made of adobe. They are more vulnerable to quakes. I must say that almost all buildings in such villages are destroyed."

He said people were still trapped under rubble but gave no figure. An official at the Van provincial crisis center told Reuters up to 600 people had been injured and 300-400 were missing, feared buried beneath rubble of collapsed buildings.

The quake struck at 6:41 a.m. EDT.

More accounts of dead bodies and destruction emerged from smaller settlements across the remote area near the Iranian border, most of them left without electricity or phone access.

BODIES

"The death toll is rising. Rescue teams are taking out dead bodies all the time," Reuters photographer Osman Orsal said in Ercis, a town of 100,000 some 100 km (60 miles) north of Van where a student dormitory collapsed.

In Van, a bustling and ancient city on a lake ringed by snow-capped mountains and with a population of 1 million, cranes were used to shift rubble of a crumpled six-storey apartment block where bystanders said 70 people were trapped.

"We heard cries and groaning from underneath the debris, we are waiting for the rescue teams to arrive," Halil Celik told Reuters as he stood beside the ruins of a building that had collapsed before his eyes.

"All of a sudden, a quake tore down the building in front of me. All the bystanders, we all ran to the building and rescued two injured people from the ruins."

At another site, three teenagers were believed trapped under a collapsed building. People clambered over the masonry, shouting: "Is there anyone there?"

An elderly rescue worker sat sobbing, his exhausted face covered in dust. Police tried to keep onlookers back. Ambulance crews sat waiting to help anyone dragged out of the debris.

There were reports of more bodies being pulled from rubble in hamlets outside Van. One village chief told NTV broadcaster: "Nobody has reached us, we have received no medical aid, the tents they sent are plain canvas. We are freezing."

No information was available on the fate of a 10th century Armenian church on Akdamar Island -- one of the last relics of Armenian culture in Turkey, which was recently reopened by the government as a peace gesture toward Armenia.

Kandilli Observatory general manager Mustafa Erdik told a news conference he estimated hundreds of lives had been lost. "It could be 500 or 1,000," he added. He said he based his estimate on the 7.2 magnitude of the earthquake, the strongest since 1999, and the quality of construction.

A nurse at a public hospital in Ercis said hospital workers were attending the wounded in the hospital garden because the building was badly damaged.

"We can't count dead or injured because we're not inside the hospital. There should be more than 100 dead bodies left next to the hospital. We left them there because it's dark and we didn't want to step on bodies," Eda Ekizoglu told CNN Turk.

The cabinet was expected to discuss the quake Monday.

"A lot of buildings collapsed, many people were killed, but we don't know the number. We are waiting for emergency help, it's very urgent," Zulfukar Arapoglu, mayor of Ercis, told news broadcaster NTV.

"We need tents urgently and rescue teams. We don't have any ambulances, and we only have one hospital. We have many killed and injured."

Turkey's Red Crescent said one of its teams was helping to rescue people from a student residence in Ercis. It had sent 1,200 tents, more than 4,000 blankets, stoves and food supplies, along with two mobile bakeries.

More than 70 aftershocks rocked the area, further unsettling residents who ran into the streets when the initial quake struck. Television pictures showed rooms shaking and furniture toppling as people ran from one building.

DAZED

Students gathered around a camp fire in Van's center and told journalists bread prices on the black market had more than quadrupled. Dazed survivors wandered past vehicles crushed by falling masonry.

Anatolian news agency reported that 200 prisoners escaped from Van's prison after the quake, but 50 returned after seeing their families.

The quake's epicenter was at the village of Tabanli, 20 km north of Van city, Kandilli said.

International offers of aid poured in from NATO, China, Japan, the United States, Azerbaijan, European countries and Israel, whose ties with Ankara have soured since Israeli commandoes killed nine Turks during a raid on an aid flotilla bound for the Israeli-blockaded Gaza Strip in 2010.

Erdogan thanked al the governments who had offered help, but said Turkey could handle the disaster relief efforts without assistance.

Serzh Sarksyan, the president of Turkey's longtime regional rival Armenia, phoned Turkey's President Abdullah Gul to offer his condolences.

Major geological fault lines cross Turkey and there are small earthquakes almost daily. Two large quakes in 1999 killed more than 20,000 people in northwest Turkey.

An earthquake struck Van province in November 1976, with 5,291 confirmed dead. Two people were killed and 79 injured in May when an earthquake shook Simav in northwest Turkey.

(Additional reporting by Seda Sezer, Ece Toksabay and Seyhmus Cakan, writing by Ibon Villelabeitia and Daren Butler; editing by Andrew Roche and Matthew Jones)



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Saturday, October 8, 2011

Somali wounded flown to Turkey

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota
6 October 2011 Last updated at 10:41 GMT Patients at Mogadishu airport - 6 October 2011 Hospitals have been struggling to cope with the wounded from Tuesday's blast Thirty six of the most severely wounded people in Tuesday's suicide attack in Somalia's capital, Mogadishu, are being flown to Turkey for treatment.

Among those on board are teenagers who at the time of the blast were at the education ministry to see if they had won study scholarships to Turkey.

The Islamist al-Shabab group said it carried out the bombing.

About 150 people were wounded and 77 have died after a lorry detonated outside several government ministries.

It is the largest attack since al-Shabab withdrew its forces from Mogadishu in August.

Burns victims

The Turkish prime minister recently visited Somalia to pledge aid and support to the war-torn country.

The BBC's Mohamed Moalimu in Mogadishu says 37 patients were taken to Mogadishu airport on Thursday morning, but one person died before the flight took off.

Continue reading the main story Al-Shabab means "The Youth" in Arabic Formed as a radical offshoot of the Union of Islamic Courts in 2006 Affiliated to al-Qaeda Controls large swathes of south and central SomaliaKilled 76 people in double attack in Uganda during 2010 football World Cup Estimated to have 7,000 to 9,000 fighters Somalia's Justice Minister Ahmed Bile, who is head of a special committee set up to deal with the aftermath of the attack, said the most of the patients being airlifted to Turkey were suffering from bad burns.

"The Somali government thanks the government and people of Turkey for rushing to the aid of the victims of the deadly attack," the cabinet said in a statement.

Our reporter says Mogadishu's main hospital has been struggling to cope with the wounded. Some people were lying outside for treatment when President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed visited on Wednesday, the day after the blast.

He announced that a $100,000 (£65,000) fund had been set up to treat the victims and help relatives of those who died.

The president - a former Islamist fighter - heads the weak UN-backed transitional government which relies on the 9,000-strong African Union force for its security.

Somalia has been without an effective central government since 1991 - the transitional government and Islamist militias are competing for control of the country.

Al-Shabab, which has links to al-Qaeda, controls large swathes of south and central Somalia.

Somalia's political instability has been compounded in the past year by the worst drought in 60 years, which has forced tens of thousands of people to flee to Mogadishu in search of food.

The UN has declared a famine in six regions of Somalia.

Mogadishu map

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