
United Nations emergency relief coordinator reveal the death toll from the earthquake in Turkey and Syria is likely to “more than double the number we know.
According to report, over 24,596
people have been confirmed dead after the 7.8 magnitude earthquake struck
southern Turkey and north-western Syria on Monday, with multiple aftershocks.
Martin Griffiths, speaking to Sky News on Saturday, said he expected tens of thousands more deaths.
Griffiths said: “I think it is difficult to estimate precisely as we need to get under the rubble, but I’m sure it will double or more,” said Griffiths.
“That’s terrifying. This is nature striking back in a really harsh way.
“It’s deeply shocking … the idea that these mountains of rubble still hold people, some of them still alive.
“We haven’t really begun to count the number of dead.”
He said that a 72-hour period after a disaster was usually the “golden period” for rescues, which had now expired, but that survivors were still being pulled out of the rubble.
“It must be incredibly difficult to decide when to stop this rescue phase,” he said.
Griffiths said he was launching a three-month operation for Turkey and Syria to help pay for the costs of operations there.
Griffiths also told Reuters he hoped in Syria aid would go to both government and opposition-held areas, but that things with this regard were “not clear yet”.
Earlier on Saturday, Stéphane Dujarric, the spokesperson for the UN secretary-general, António Guterres, told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme that negotiations were continuing to gain access to more areas in Syria and called for “solidarity” in the relief effort.
He said: “Our message is clear, it’s time to put all politics aside. Just focus on the men, women and children who desperately need help in Syria and in southern Turkey.
“Wherever we work, we have to work
with the authorities in charge. That’s just the way that UN humanitarian aid is
structured. So in the rebel-held territories, we work with the authorities
there; in the government-held areas, we work with the government.”
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