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World - Europe

Woman rescued 41 hours after earthquake in Turkey

Finding survivor in rubble buoys rescuers' hopes

November 14, 1999
Web posted at: 2:17 p.m. EST (1917 GMT)


In this story:

Officials rush aid to avoid criticism

Hillary Clinton in Ankara before summit

'Kaynasli was set back 100 years'

RELATED STORIES, SITES icon



DUZCE, Turkey (CNN) -- Cheers rose from cold and tired rescuers when they pulled a woman out alive from the rubble of a five-story building on Sunday in Duzce, Turkey, nearly two days after a devastating earthquake. Turkish rescuers had been working with Algerians and Russians for nearly 24 hours before being able to reach the woman, who was heard knocking.

The rescue renewed hope for emergency workers who are braving frigid temperatures, frequent aftershocks, and shifting piles of rubble in hopes of finding more survivors in the ruins of Duzce's shattered buildings.

 VIDEO
VideoCNN's Tom Mintier reports on the desperate rescue efforts after Turkey's earthquake (November 14)
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  GALLERY
Chronology of major earthquakes since 1980

 
  AUDIO

Serdar Akinan, executive producer at CNN Turk, reports that authorities in Duzce were not prepared for the latest earthquake

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MAGNITUDE GUIDE
Below is an interactive guide to earthquake magnitude and severity:

  MESSAGE BOARD
Mediterranean quakes

 

The rescued woman, Saziye Bulut, 48, was reported to be in stable condition. She was the fifth survivor rescued from the same building. Immediately after she was saved, she asked her chief rescuer to come over for tea sometime.

Officials said Sunday that 349 people had been killed and about 2,386 injured by Friday's magnitude 7.2 quake in northwestern Turkey.

Emergency workers had yet to sift through most of the rubble. Hundreds of people remained missing. A handful of survivors were found on Saturday, including a pregnant woman and two men pulled out alive from the debris.

Officials rush aid to avoid criticism

Turkish officials have rushed aid to the earthquake-stricken town, trying to avoid the criticism that stung the government after August's catastrophic tremors in Izmit that left 17,000 dead.

Top Turkish officials, including Prime Minister Bulent Ecevit, made a point of visiting the area Saturday. Turkish troops were sent to the area with picks and shovels, and earth-moving equipment quickly moved into the region. In Duzce, a farming town at the earthquake's epicenter, the quake tore out the center of a turn-of-the-century mosque, leaving only the walls standing.

The quick response drew good reviews, although some onlookers said they were waiting to see if the official appearances would translate into quick action. As winter approaches and tent villages spring up after the new earthquake, many townspeople wonder just how long it will take to get a safe and solid roof over their heads.

Weary and anxious Turks are huddled around fires outside shelters, some having lost their homes, others too scared to return inside buildings battered by the tremors. Transport Minister Enis Oksuz said the tremor could cost Turkey's fragile economy $10 billion -- on top of an estimated $12 billion from the August disaster.

Hillary Clinton in Ankara before summit

The quake struck as Turkey prepared to host world leaders for a summit of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe. The earthquake rocked buildings in Istanbul, 90 miles (145 km) to the west, where the world leaders are scheduled to convene, but Ecevit said the summit would not be canceled.

President Clinton left for Turkey on Sunday and first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton and their daughter, Chelsea, arrived in Ankara on Saturday.

"Our hearts go out to the families of the victims," Hillary Clinton said in a statement. "As President Clinton has said, America stands ready to help in any way we can."

A government crisis center put the death toll at 374, the Anatolia news agency reported. Citing figures provided by Health Minister Osman Durmus, it said 2,923 people were injured.

International rescue teams rushed to Turkey from Greece, the United States, France, Germany and Italy. A U.S. team from Fairfax, Virginia, arrived Sunday.

Zekeriya Percin silently watched as rescuers tried to reach the charred bodies of his 73-year-old father Celal and 19 other men.

"An aftershock knocked over the stove, and a fire engulfed the whole coffeehouse," he said.

'Kaynasli was set back 100 years'

Kaynasli, a wheat-growing town of 7,000 people, was one of the hardest- hit towns in the region.

Fatma Demirci said four of her relatives were killed when her house collapsed during the earthquake. "Kaynasli was set back 100 years," she said, gazing at collapsed buildings and a shattered mosque.

Bolu province is just 45 miles (72 km) east of the region worst hit by the August 17 quake. That quake, which had a magnitude of 7.4, was centered on the more populated coastal areas of western Turkey rather than the mountainous areas such as Bolu.

But the area hit Friday was already struggling to recover from the earlier quake. Tens of thousands of people who lost their homes still live in tents.

Dirioz said the focus of emergency efforts should soon shift from search and rescue to helping those left homeless by the quake.

Seismologists warned on Saturday that the country could be hit by more quakes, possibly closer to Istanbul, a city of 12 million people.

Friday's quake was not an aftershock to the August 17 quake, but the fault that ruptured near Duzce is part of Turkey's intricate fault grid, according to quake experts.

Berlin Bureau Chief Chris Burns, Correspondent Amanda Kibble, The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.



RELATED STORIES:
Turkish earthquake toll tops 360 dead, 1,800 injured
November 13, 1999
Turkey reeling from latest deadly quake
November 12, 1999
Several hurt as quake rattles southwest Turkey
October 5, 1999
Hundreds injured in Turkey's second deadly quake in month
September 13, 1999
Rescuers try to free pinned victims after Athens quake
September 8, 1999
Powerful tremors shake northwest Turkey; at least one dead
August 31, 1999

DISASTER RELIEF SITES:
World Vision
Mercy International USA
AmeriCares
Disaster Relief from DisasterRelief.org
American Red Cross
Doctors Without Borders
International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies
World Relief
The American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, Inc. Turkey Earthquake Relief

RELATED SITES:
Survivor message site (in Turkish)
Turkish Daily News Online
USGS National Earthquake Information Center
Global Earthquake Response Center
Newton's Apple: Earthquake Info
Kandilli Observatory and Earthquake Research Institute


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