unilad homepage
unilad homepage
  • News
    • UK News
    • US News
    • World News
    • Crime
    • Health
    • Money
    • Sport
    • Travel
  • Music
  • Technology
  • Film and TV
    • News
    • DC Comics
    • Disney
    • Marvel
    • Netflix
  • Celebrity
  • Politics
  • Advertise
  • Terms
  • Privacy & Cookies
  • LADbible Group
  • LADbible
  • SPORTbible
  • GAMINGbible
  • Tyla
  • UNILAD Tech
  • FOODbible
  • License Our Content
  • About Us & Contact
  • Jobs
  • Latest
  • Archive
  • Topics A-Z
  • Authors
Facebook
Instagram
X
Threads
TikTok
YouTube
Submit Your Content
Powerful earthquake in Turkey and Syria kills 360 people
Home>News
Updated 07:42 6 Feb 2023 GMTPublished 07:32 6 Feb 2023 GMT

Powerful earthquake in Turkey and Syria kills 360 people

The 7.8 magnitude earthquake rocked southern Turkey and northern Syria in the early hours of Monday morning

Tom Wood

Tom Wood

google discoverFollow us on Google Discover
Featured Image Credit: Twitter

Topics: World News

Tom Wood
Tom Wood

Tom Wood is a LADbible journalist and Twin Peaks enthusiast. Despite having a career in football cut short by a chronic lack of talent, he managed to obtain degrees from both the University of London and Salford. According to his French teacher, at the weekend he mostly likes to play football and go to the park with his brother. Contact Tom on [email protected]

X

@TPWagwim

Advert

Advert

Advert

At least 360 people have died after a 7.8 magnitude earthquake struck southern Turkey and northern Syria in the early hours of Monday morning.

The death toll is expected to rise, as hundreds of people were also injured in the quake, which toppled buildings, leaving rescue workers to sift through piles of rubble in urban areas in order to find survivors or bodies.

There were also strong aftershocks following the initial quake, which drove many from their homes and out into the cold after a snowy night.

The earthquake struck early on Monday morning.
PA

Advert

In the Turkish city of Adana, one resident claimed that three buildings were brought down by the force of the earthquake, telling AP that he heard one trapped survivor shouting out ‘I don’t have the strength anymore’ as rescuers tried to get through to him.

Across the border in Syria, the quake affected an area held by opposition forces that are also temporarily home to around four million people who have been left displaced by the ongoing civil war in the country.

Many of those people are living in sub-standard accommodation and with very limited health care.

“We fear that the deaths are in the hundreds,” a doctor in the town of Atmeh, held by the rebels, also told AP.

Raed Salah, the head of the White Helmets - a volunteer group dedicated to search and rescue as well as evacuation and medical care for those affected by the war - said that many entire neighbourhoods had been collapsed by the quake.

Houses were completely turned to rubble by the powerful quake.
PA

On Twitter, Turkey’s president Recep Tayyip Erdogan wrote that ‘search and rescue teams were immediately dispatched’ to areas affected.

He added: “We hope that we will get through this disaster together as soon as possible and with the least damage.”

According to Turkey’s Disaster and Emergency Management agency, at least 76 people in the country have been killed, with 440 others injured.

Syria state media reported that 237 people were killed and more than 630 injured, with at least 47 people killed in areas held by the rebels against the government.

Many residents have been forced out into the cold following the quake.
PA

There has also been widespread disruption on roads surrounding the area affected by the earthquake, with traffic jams caused by those fleeing the destruction making it difficult for emergency teams to get through to those areas worst affected.

Authorities have urged people to stay off the roads, with mosques in the area opened up to offer shelter to those who cannot return to their homes but who need to get out of the cold.

In the opposition-held areas of Syria, the Syrian Civil Defense described the situation as 'disastrous', stating that many were still trapped beneath the rubble of buildings felled in the quake.

According to the US Geological Survey, the earthquake was centred about 33 kilometers from the Turkish city of Gaziantep, in the region of Anatolia.

It was felt as far away as the Egyptian capital Cairo, with many residents in the Lebanese capital Beirut brought out of their beds due to buildings shaking.

Turkey sits on several fault lines and is frequently struck by earthquakes.

One such quake in 1999 killed 18,000 people.

  • Death toll rises after double earthquake hit Venezuela as update has 50,000 people missing
  • Texas plane crash kills one and more left injured as jet erupts into flames on highway
  • People with no inner monologue describe what goes on in their minds
  • World’s most lethal animal that kills over 1,000,000 people every year revealed and it's not what you'd expect

Choose your content:

26 mins ago
2 hours ago
3 hours ago
4 hours ago
  • Jean Catuffe/Getty Images
    26 mins ago

    England player's World Cup journey could be 'over' as shock injury is 'worse than initially thought'

    One of the England squad will have to miss some matches following an injury

    News
  • Netflix
    2 hours ago

    Lawyer asks if Taylor Parker should be on death row after sharing what was heard 'behind the scenes'

    Taylor Parker was sentenced to death for the brutal murder of 21-year-old Reagan Simmons-Hancock

    News
  • PA Real Life
    3 hours ago

    Parents were told not to be 'overly worried' about three-year-old son's rash that turned out to be cancer

    The boy's mom said it felt like her 'world had ended' when he got his diagnosis

    News
  • Supplied
    4 hours ago

    We've lived on a cruise ship for two years – this is what no one tells you about life at sea

    The couple purchased a cabin on Villa Vie Odyssey cruise ship, which they now live on full time

    News