ISTANBUL: Turkiye will hold pre-dawn vigils on Tuesday for the loss of more than 50,000 people _ and parts of entire cities _ in the earthquake-prone country’s deadliest disaster of modern times.

Grieving Turks are still coming to terms with how a 7.8-magnitude tremor could upturn the lives of millions of people in a matter of seconds while they were still asleep.

An updated toll released this week showed that 53,537 people had died across 11 south-eastern provinces officially designated as the disaster zone.

The confirmed loss of 5,951 more lives in neighbouring Syria makes last year’s Feb 6 earthquake one of the 10 deadliest in the world over the past 100 years. Ancient cities such as Antakya have been effectively wiped off the map.

Others have gaping holes in place of apartment towers that toppled like houses of cards when the ground began to move at 4.17am.

Shell-shocked survivors stood outside in the freezing cold and listened to those trapped under concrete slabs of debris scream in agonising pain.

“It’s been a year, but it doesn’t leave our minds,” housewife Cagla Demirel said in one of the container camps set up for hundreds of thousands of survivors in Antakya.

“Life has lost its spark,” the 31-year-old said. “I have no family left to visit, no door to knock on, no pleasant place to be. Nothing remains.”

‘Can you hear us?’

Antakya’s remaining residents plan to gather at 4.17am on Tuesday for a vigil that will see everyone cry out: “Can you hear us?” The call became ubiquitous across the disaster zone as people searched for loved ones in the rubble.

But it also appears to be a nuanced reminder for President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s government that many in the quake zone feel left behind.

Analysts at the Economic Policy Research Foundation (TEPAV) point out that the disaster struck an area already weighted down by unemployment and underinvestment.

“Some districts in the region have the highest poverty rate in Turkiye,” TEPAV said in a report.

Erdogan pushed back hard against complaints that government rescuers were unprepared and slow to respond. He has branded the quake “the catastrophe of the century” that no nation could have averted or quickly overcome.

He criss-crossed the nation in the first weeks of the disaster and promised to deliver 650,000 new housing units within a year.

‘No return to normal’

Erdogan began to hand out keys in Antakya on Saturday for the first 7,000 apartments of the 46,000 ready to be delivered across the quake zone this month.

He said up to 20,000 units would be delivered monthly and 200,000 by the end of the year – short of his initial promise but still impressive for a region hit by post-quake chaos.

“Of course, we cannot bring back the lives we lost, but we can compensate all the other losses,” Erdogan told Antakya residents on Saturday.

“We made promises to do so.”

But Erdogan’s words offer little solace to people such as ice cream vendor Kadir Yeniceli.

The 70-year-old native of Kahramanmaras — a hard-hit city where Erdogan’s Islamic-rooted party enjoys overwhelming support _ said people feel “confused” about what happens next.

Published in Dawn, February 4th, 2024

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