Thousands of foreign aid workers have arrived in Turkey and the first UN aid convoy has entered Syria after this week’s twin earthquakes.
(Bloomberg) — Thousands of foreign aid workers have arrived in Turkey and the first UN aid convoy has entered Syria after this week’s twin earthquakes.
The death toll surpassed 20,000 across Turkey and neighboring Syria, with thousands still missing.
Turkey’s parliament passed a three-month state of emergency in the affected areas, while President Recep Tayyip Erdogan visited the quake-hit provinces of Gaziantep, Osmaniye and Kilis.
Key Developments
- Azeri Oil Exports From Turkey May Not Resume Until Next Week (1)
- Turkish Donors Order Container Homes for Earthquake Survivors
- Turkey Assets Stop Skid as Investors Weigh Post-Disaster Risks
- BP Says Exports of Azeri Oil From Turkey Are Yet to Restart (1)
- Erdogan Vows Building Blitz to Renew Quake-Hit Areas Within Year
- Turkey Risks Inflation Surge, Budget Breach as Quake Costs Mount
(All times Istanbul, GMT +3)
Death Toll Rises Above 20,102 (6:30 p.m.)
Turkey’s death toll rose to 16,546, President Erdogan said in Osmaniye, bringing the total including Syria to 20,102.
The number injured in Turkey is 66,132, Erdogan said.
Netherlands Defense Ministry Sends Ambulance Aircraft to Turkey (5:10 p.m.)
The Netherlands deployed a C-130 Hercules transport aircraft with medical facilities to help earthquake victims in Turkey, according to Defense Minister Kajsa Ollongren.
The C-130 is being sent following a request from the Turkish government, Ollongren said in a letter to the parliament.
Turkey Approves State of Emergency (4:57 p.m.)
Turkey’s parliament voted to implement a state of emergency in the quake-hit areas.
State-of-emergency powers will enable the government to stop “malicious groups” including looting and theft that’s taken place in some areas, President Erdogan said earlier Thursday.
First UN Aid Shipment Enters Northwest Syria (2:00 p.m.)
The first convoy of UN humanitarian aid crossed into Syria from Turkey’s Cilvegozu border crossing in Hatay Province, according to the Syrian American Medical Society, which operates on both sides of the border.
The six-truck convoy, carrying shelter-related materials and items like blankets and hygiene products, was delayed by damage to roads, according to Dima Marrawi, senior communications and advocacy officer at SAMS.
Marrawi, who spoke from the outskirts of Turkey’s Gaziantep, said the shipment hardly responds to the the scale of devastation in northwest Syria and people’s most urgent needs. SAMS-run hospitals in the area have little left to treat the overwhelming number of spine injuries and bone fractures coming in, she said.
Fitch Sees Insurable Losses Exceeding $4 Billion (12:28 p.m.)
Fitch Ratings said insurable economic losses following the quakes could exceed $4 billion, though it added it was hard to estimate while the situation was still evolving.
The rating firm estimated insured losses at around $1 billion due to low insurance coverage in the affected regions.
Turkish Presidency Criticizes Politicians Who ‘Sow Division’ (10:40 a.m.)
“This is no time for politics, and we strongly condemn some statements made by some political figures that seek to sow divisions,” Erdogan’s Communications Director Fahrettin Altun says on Twitter.
Opposition leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu has said Erdogan is responsible for failures that amplified the damage.
–With assistance from Sam Dagher, Beril Akman, Patrick Sykes, Ugur Yilmaz and Cagan Koc.
More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com
©2023 Bloomberg L.P.