Tear -rich reunion for father and daughter, who were separated by the earthquake in Turkey for four days

Tear -rich reunion for father and daughter, who were separated by the earthquake in Turkey for four days

A little girl had a tearful reunion with her father in the hospital after four days under rubble after she had lost both her mother and her brother in the earthquakes of last week.

The girl Ghada was filmed as she sobbed uncontrollably when she was led into a room where her father, who also broke out in tears, was waiting for her.

The couple had been separated during the earthquake, which tens of thousands of people had cost their lives in southern Turkey and northwestern Syria. They were treated in separate hospitals.

The film material of her moving meeting was put online by Mousa Zidane, a photographer who works with the rescue group of the Syrian white helmets.

It was not immediately clear whether the video was shot in the northwest of Syria or in the southern Turkey, where many Syrian refugees live.

"After they were separated during the #Berbbes, Ghada and her father were finally united again. To be caught under the ruins, losing their mother and brother and being treated in various hospitals, they could not separate #Syria #Turkey," he wrote in the caption.



while the father and daughter were visibly traumatized, she again offered her reunion after the loss of two relatives a moment of relief in the middle of a week of incredible terror for Turks and Syrians.

The chances of survival for people who are enclosed under ruins are now practically no longer available. But despite these opportunities, many victims are still found alive.

dr. Steven Godby, expert in natural hazards at Nottingham Trent University, said that these cases are "rare", but emphasized previous examples in which people were found alive more than two weeks after an earthquake.

"Someone was saved after 15 days in Port-Au-Prince after the earthquake in Haiti 2010," he said.

on Tuesday, eight days after the two countries had been devastated by successive earthquakes, local media reports were saved from the ruins of the southern Tower.

Two brothers were pulled out of ruins in the south -facing Tower, while a teenager became the third rescue of the morning, about 198 hours after the devastating earthquakes of the past week.

A lot of rescue workers, some of which were worn by Belarusian search and rescue uniforms, cheered when Muhammed Enes Yeninar, 17, and his brother Abdulbaki Yeninar, 21, were carried out of the ruins of a collapsed apartment block in the province of Kahramanmara.

Shortly afterwards, the broadcasters in the neighboring province of Adiyman showed the 18-year-old Muhammed Cafer, who was worn on a stretcher from a collapsed building, with an oxygen mask and a paramedic next to him, who held a bag with intravenous liquids.

When he was worn into a waiting ambulance, you could see how Mr. Cafers moved.

There was no further information about the state of young men who were saved almost eight days after the devastating earthquake of the strength 7.8, in which more than 37,000 people were killed in southern Turkey and northwestern Syria, the official number of fatalities, which is expected to increase much higher.

Also on Tuesday, a woman was saved by a Ukrainian team from the ruins of a building in the southern Turkish province of Hatay, about 205 hours after a devastating earthquake had been hit by the region, CNN Turk.



In some areas, rescuers are now leaving signs that show that they have inspected ruins and write in Turkish "no sound" while related phone numbers leave to call when corpses are recovered.

Syrians who live in the enclave Idlib and the surrounding area controlled by the opposition have complained about the lack of help since the earthquakes. At least 5,714 people died in Syria, both in government areas and in rebel areas

Bashar al-Assad, the Syrian president, agreed to leave more help from the United Nations from Turkey in the northwest of Syria.

So far, the United Nations has only been able to provide help via a border crossing at Bab al-Hawa.

Martin Griffiths, a UN aid manager, said Mr. Assad had given permission to open two more goals in Bab al-Salameh and Al Rai for an initial period of three months.

But Raed Al Saleh, the leader of the Weißhelme, condemned the UN's decision to grant Mr. Assad's approval for the border crossings, and called this "free political profit".

"This is shocking and we are at a loss about how the UN behaves," he said.

Source: The Telegraph

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