Friday 28 October 2011

Boy recover alive from the building rubble in Turkey quake hit area (Mian Shakeel Aslam)

Mian Shakeel Aslam----Rescuers worked under floodlights, a 13-year-old pulled from the rubble alive from a collapsed house, leveled more than 100 hours after the earthquake, many buildings in eastern Turkey, killing at least 550 people.

An image of the Anadolu news agency showed rescuers carrying Tokay Ferhat from the rubble, with a neck brace. In other pictures of a hospital, he was confident and looked at his rescuer.

Tokay rescue occurred after 108 hours on Sunday 7.2 magnitude, the agency said.

The agency said the boy was injured but gave no further details. The building collapsed was rescued from the Tokay was in ECRIS, the city hardest hit by the earthquake.

The earthquake has killed at least 550 people and wounded 2,300, depending on the country's disaster management, AFAD, Website Updated on Thursday night. Thousands of homeless people in tents went to fight in the cold, rain and snow brought more difficulties.

Television footage showed on Thursday, a rescue team cheering and applauding the other young man, wearing a red sweater and tied to a stretcher, also from the rubble. His eyes were closed most of the time, but it opened at any given time.

The Anatolia news agency identified the man as 18-year-old Imdat Padaka. He was rescued by a team of Azerbaijan.

Padaka was transferred to the nearby city of Van and was dehydrated but in good condition, according to news agency.

Emergency officials say 187 have been rescued from the rubble. About 2,000 buildings were destroyed, authorities said another 3700 buildings uninhabitable.

More help for the survivors began to arrive, with the Turkish authorities to provide more tents for distribution problems of recognition, looting aid trucks, even before reaching Erciş included.

Families, shopping hooks invaluable help, along with others. However, some people spent a fifth night outdoors huddled under blankets in front of a campfire, or wait for the news that the clock over lost or damaged homes.

As survivors gathered pieces of wood, light a fire heater or stove, set the Red Crescent, and several pro-Islamic groups to soup kitchens and served or rice and beans.

Sermin Yildirim, eight months pregnant, shared a tent with a family of four people who were distant relatives, along with her husband and their twins. His family was too scared to return to his apartment.

"It's getting colder, my children are coughing. I do not know how long we have to stay here," said Yildirim. "They were not able to get a tent. We hope to get our"

Poste By: Mian Shakeel Aslam

Source: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/turkey/8854539/Turkish-earth...

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