Relatives Anxiously Search for Loved Ones from under Rubble of Türkiye Quake

A camp housing the displaced in Kahramanmaras. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
A camp housing the displaced in Kahramanmaras. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
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Relatives Anxiously Search for Loved Ones from under Rubble of Türkiye Quake

A camp housing the displaced in Kahramanmaras. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
A camp housing the displaced in Kahramanmaras. (Asharq Al-Awsat)

Ghaleb stands in a small park facing what once was the biggest hotel in the heart of the Turkish city of Kahramanmaras that was devastated by last week’s earthquake.

He watches silently and anxiously as vehicles lift the rubble of the hotel that was one of the city’s landmarks. He is searching for his brother who is lost in the ruin with nine of his colleagues.

Several locals are waiting anxiously like Ghaleb. His brother Khaled was unlucky that night. He worked as a major money exchanger in Istanbul. He was in Kahramanmaras to train locals in the business. Eight of his colleagues were also with him.

He had arrived at the hotel and was to stay the night and begin work the next day. The earthquake struck that night and he and his colleagues did not survive.

Eyes fixed on the excavators, Ghaleb said he has lost hope that his brother will be found alive. “I want to take him home with me,” he remarked to Asharq Al-Awsat.

On the other side of the hotel, Syrians gathered in front of destroyed houses. They are awaiting news about relatives and friends that are buried under the rubble of two buildings.

“We found three, there are still four more,” said one of them.

A man at the scene said he came all the way from Kayseri city in the heart of Anatolia in search of his brother and his family, who are lost under the rubble. He points to a teary-eyed man: “This is my brother. He is searching for his wife.”

The man told Asharq Al-Awsat that he also lives in Kayseri and that his wife, Zeinab, was visiting Kahramanmaras the night the earthquake struck. She was visiting her family for the first time since they got married and she died with them.

“They told us that there are no survivors under the rubble, but we are not leaving without them. We have been here since the earthquake struck and we will not leave without them,” he stressed.



War Reaches Lebanon's Far North After Rare, Deadly Israeli Strike

First responders and locals search at the site of an Israeli strike in Ain Yaacoub, Akkar region, on November 12, 2024, amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hezbollah. - AFP
First responders and locals search at the site of an Israeli strike in Ain Yaacoub, Akkar region, on November 12, 2024, amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hezbollah. - AFP
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War Reaches Lebanon's Far North After Rare, Deadly Israeli Strike

First responders and locals search at the site of an Israeli strike in Ain Yaacoub, Akkar region, on November 12, 2024, amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hezbollah. - AFP
First responders and locals search at the site of an Israeli strike in Ain Yaacoub, Akkar region, on November 12, 2024, amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hezbollah. - AFP

A day after Israeli warplanes flattened their building, Lebanese residents helped rescuers scour the rubble for survivors, still reeling from the rare strike in the country's far north.

The bombing killed at least eight people in Ain Yaacoub, one of the northernmost villages Israel has struck, far from Lebanon's war-ravaged southern border.

"They hit a building where more than 30 people lived without any evacuation warning," said Mustafa Hamza, who lives near the site of the strike. "It's an indescribable massacre."

Following Monday’s strike on Ain Yaacoub, residents joined rescuers, using bare hands to sift through dust and chunks of concrete, hoping to find survivors.

The health ministry said the death toll was expected to rise, AFP reported.

On the ground, people could be seen pulling body parts from the rubble in the morning, following a long night of search operations.

In near-darkness, rescuers had struggled to locate survivors, using mobile phone lights and car headlamps in a remote area where national grid power is scarce.

For years, Syrians fleeing war in their home country, along with more recently displaced Lebanese escaping Israeli strikes, sought refuge in the remote Akkar region near the Syrian border, once seen as a haven.

"The situation is dire. People are shocked," Hamza told AFP. "People from all over the region have come here to try to help recover the victims."

The village, inhabited mostly by Sunni Muslims and Christians, lies far from the strongholds of Hezbollah, a Shiite Muslim movement.

A security source said Monday's air strike targeted a Hezbollah member who had relocated with his family to the building in Ain Yaacoub from south Lebanon.

Contacted by AFP, the Israeli military said the strike was aimed at "a Hezbollah terrorist" and specified that the missile used sought to minimise civilian harm.

Local official Rony al-Hage told AFP that it was the northernmost Israeli attack since the full-blown Israel-Hezbollah war erupted in September.

After Israel ramped up its campaign of air raids, it also sent ground troops into south Lebanon.

"The people who were in my house were my uncle, his wife, and my sisters... A Syrian woman and her children who had been living here for 10 years, were also killed," said Hashem Hashem, the son of the building's owner.

His relatives had fled Israel's onslaught on south Lebanon seeking a safe haven in the Akkar region more than a month ago, he said.

The Israel-Hezbollah war in Lebanon has displaced at least 1.3 million people, nearly 900,000 of them inside the country, the United Nations migration agency says.

Israeli strikes outside Hezbollah strongholds have repeatedly targeted buildings where displaced civilians lived, with Lebanese security officials often telling AFP the targets were Hezbollah operatives.

On Sunday, Lebanon said an Israeli strike killed 23 people, including seven children, in the village of Almat -- a rare strike north of the capital.

Earlier this month, authorities said an Israeli strike on a residential building killed at least 20 people in Barja, a town south of Beirut that is outside Hezbollah's area of influence.

The war erupted after nearly a year of cross-border exchanges of fire, launched by Hezbollah in support of its Palestinian ally Hamas following their October 7, 2023 attack on Israel that triggered the Gaza war.

More than 3,240 people have been killed in Lebanon since the clashes began last year, according to the health ministry, with most of the deaths coming since late September.