WORLD HEADLINE | Nearly 26M people affected by Turkiye, Syria quake: WHO

A Turkish soldier walks among destroyed buildings in Hatay, on February 12, 2023, after a 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck the country’s south-east. – The death toll from a massive earthquake that hit Turkey and Syria climbed to more than 20,000 on February 9, 2023, as hopes faded of finding survivors stuck under rubble in freezing weather. (Photo by Yasin AKGUL / AFP)

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GENEVA (AFP) – Almost 26 million people have been affected by the deadly earthquake that ravaged Turkiye and Syria this week, the World Health Organization (WHO) said on Saturday, warning that dozens of hospitals had been damaged.

As the death toll from the quake rose above 25,000, the United Nations (UN) health agency launched a flash appeal on Saturday asking for USD42.8 million to help it address the immediate, towering health needs.

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The WHO which has already released USD16 million from its emergency fund, had previously said up to 23 million people could be impacted.

But on Saturday, that rose to nearly 26 million, with 15 million affected in Turkiye and nearly 11 million in war-torn Syria.

Among them, more than five million people were considered to be particularly vulnerable, including close to 350,000 elderly people and over 1.4 million children.

 

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WHO estimated that in Turkiye, where more than 4,000 buildings have collapsed in the quake, 15 hospitals had suffered partial or heavy damage.

In Syria, where the healthcare system had already been ravaged by 12 years of civil war, at least 20 health facilities across the hard-hit northwest, including four hospitals, had sustained damage.

This is making it all the more difficult to help the tens of thousands of people who have been injured in the disaster.

And while emergency medical services have been overwhelmed with trauma patients, essential health services have been severely disrupted, WHO warned.

The UN agency said there was a dire need for immediate trauma care, post-trauma rehabilitative care, essential medicines, prevention and control to prevent disease outbreaks and access to mental health support.

“WHO’s goal is to save lives in the immediate aftermath of the disaster, to minimise its downstream health consequences, including mental health, and to rapidly restore essential health services across all earthquake-affected populations.”

 

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The agency added that it had flown 37 metric tonnes of trauma and emergency surgery supplies to Turkiye on Thursday, while 35 metric tonnes had arrived in Syria on Friday.

“These life-saving supplies will be used to treat and care for 100,000 people as well as for 120,000 urgent surgical interventions in both countries,” it said.

A third flight carrying a similar load was scheduled to reach Syria today.

WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, who arrived in Aleppo on Saturday, tweeted that he was “heartbroken to see the conditions survivors are facing… freezing weather and extremely limited access to shelter, food, water, heat and medical care”.

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