Hundreds of rescue teams  dug through the night in search of survivors among dozens of pancaked  buildings. Residents also searched for their missing as aid groups  scrambled to set up tents, field hospitals and kitchens to assist  thousands left homeless.
Officials  said hundreds of mud-brick homes in villages and concrete buildings in  cities tumbled down in the earthquake that struck the province of Van,  near the border with Iran, on Sunday.
Worst-hit was the city of Ercis, where about 80 multistory buildings collapsed. Interior Minister Idris Naim Sahin  said some 40 buildings in Ercis still had people trapped inside, giving  rise to fears that the death toll could increase substantially. The  minister did not give any estimates.
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said "close to all" mud-brick homes in surrounding villages had collapsed.
Sahin  said 117 were killed in Ercis, another 100 died in Van while some 740  people were injured in the temblor that also rattled parts of Iran and  Armenia.
Ercis, an eastern city of 75,000 close to the Iranian border, is in one of Turkey's  most earthquake-prone zones. The bustling, larger city of Van, about 55  miles (90 kilometers) south of Ercis, also sustained substantial  damage, and highways in the area caved in.
Some inmates escaped a  prison in Van after one of its walls collapsed. TRT television said  around 150 inmates had fled, but a prison official said the number was  much smaller and many later returned.The  quake also damaged some buildings in the town of Patnos, some 30 miles  (50 kilometers) northwest of Ercis, where military and Red Crescent  trucks were seen transporting tents and other aid equipment.
U.S.  scientists recorded more than 100 aftershocks in eastern Turkey within  10 hours of the quake, including one with a magnitude of 6.0.Authorities advised people to stay away from damaged homes, warning they could collapse in the aftershocks.
Many  residents spent the night outdoors and lit campfires, while the Red  Crescent began setting up tents in a stadium. Others sought shelter with  relatives in nearby villages.
Around  1,275 rescue teams from 38 provinces were being sent to the region,  officials said, and troops were also assisting search-and-rescue  efforts.
Several countries  offered Turkey humanitarian aid and assistance with search and rescue  efforts but Erdogan said Turkey was able to cope for the time being.  Azerbaijan, Iran and Bulgaria nevertheless sent assistance, he said.
Among  those offering help were Israel and Greece. The offer from Israel came  despite a rift in relations following a 2010 Israeli navy raid on a  Gaza-bound aid flotilla that left nine Turks dead. Greece, which has a  deep dispute with Turkey over the(...)More.

 
 
 
 
 
 10/24/2011 12:34:00 AM
10/24/2011 12:34:00 AM
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