World News

Syria earthquake survivors battle cold in tents and vehicles

Since the earthquake destroyed her home, Syrian teacher Suzanne Abdallah has lived in a small truck crammed with her family members, just a stone’s throw from where their house stood. Ten of us pile into this truck. We sleep sitting up,” said the 42-year-old, wearing multiple layers of clothes and a wooled scarf wrapped around her head against the biting winter cold.

Her infant boy was sleeping in a makeshift hammock made from a blanket that was swinging from the packed vehicle’s roof, as seven other children were sharing a basic breakfast inside.

“Conditions are difficult, especially as I have a toddler,” said Abdallah. “I woke up this morning and found his hands were extremely cold, so I put him in the sun to warm him.

“We want a shelter; we need help for the sake of the little children. Abdallah and her family are among several million Syrians made homeless, according to UN estimates, by the 7.8-magnitude quake that also devastated vast areas of Turkey.

More than 40,000 people were killed across the two countries by the February 6 disaster that flattened entire districts, including in Abdallah’s home city of Jindayris on the Turkish border.

Syria’s people have endured more than a decade of brutal civil war, and many fled to the rebel-held Idlib province from other regions now under the control of President Bashar al-Assad’s forces.

Survivors of the powerful quake have since huddled in whatever places they could find, many sleeping in tents and vehicles, others huddling around fires outside.

Abdallah’s father-in-law turned his vehicle into a makeshift home for his sons and their families, covering the top of the truck with blankets and rugs for added insulation. Living in a car is difficult; we are two households,” Abdallah told AFP.

Around here, much of the district has been reduced to rubble, from which rescuers from the White Helmets group recovered more than 500 bodies.

Jindayris is among the cities worst-hit by the quake that killed more than 3,600 people across five Syrian provinces, claiming the highest death tolls in Idlib and Aleppo. Families here have slept in schools, mosques and displacement camps or in basic shelters built in open spaces such as olive groves and public squares.

Across the town, the families of retired employee Abdelrahman Haji Ahmed and his neighbours now live in makeshift tents pitched in the middle of their demolished street. At night, the women and children huddle inside them, under tattered plastic sheets and blankets, while Ahmed and the other men sleep under the stars.

“There is no electricity, no water, no sanitation,” he told AFP, his ruined former home behind him. “The lives of all the families are tragic.” Ahmed held his little daughter, watched on by other children, and said that right now all his family needs is “one or two tents so that the families can rest.

Source: eNCA

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