Turkish ministry ignored earthquake safety warnings in Izmir
Turkish ministry ignored earthquake safety warnings in Izmir/node/1757461/middle-east
Turkish ministry ignored earthquake safety warnings in Izmir
Rescue teams look for survivors and victims in the city of Izmir on November 2, 2020, after a powerful earthquake struck Turkey’s western coast and parts of Greece. (AFP)
Turkish ministry ignored earthquake safety warnings in Izmir
Documents show collapsed buildings highlighted as dangerous as far back as 2010
Around 10 million buildings illegally built or renovated given retrospective planning permission
Updated 03 November 2020
Arab News
LONDON: Government ineptitude may have contributed to the deaths of more than 75 people in the Turkish city of Izmir, after repeated warnings over the safety of buildings were ignored.
At least 120 people remain missing in Izmir after an earthquake measuring 7.0 on the Richter scale occurred near the Turkish coast on Oct. 30, bringing down 17 high-rise buildings in the city.
Documents seen by The Times newspaper show that reports delivered to the Ministry of Environment and Urbanization over unsafe buildings in the city in 2010, 2012 and 2018 were not acted upon. Some of those buildings collapsed in the earthquake.
In addition, a plan drawn up by the ministry to inspect all buildings across the country by 2017 — in the aftermath of the 2011 earthquake that struck the eastern city of Van, killing 604 people — was never carried out.
“Two buildings in our street collapsed — there were huge clouds of dust and smoke and masonry collapsing on to us. I helped rescue a family from their balcony in the next building and then I reported for duty,” said Ramazan Bal, a local council employee who was inside one of the buildings highlighted in 2010 when the Oct. 30 earthquake struck.
“By 10 p.m. I realised my father was missing. We know he is here because his last phone signal came from inside, five minutes after the earthquake.”
The building, an eight-storey apartment block called the Riza Bey, had been marked as at risk of serious damage should an earthquake hit the area.
HIGHLIGHT
Documents seen by The Times newspaper show that reports delivered to the Ministry of Environment and Urbanization over unsafe buildings in the city in 2010, 2012 and 2018 were not acted upon. Some of those buildings collapsed in the earthquake.
Eylem Ulutas Ayatar, head of the local chamber of engineering, told The Times: “The epicentre was so far from Izmir — this wasn’t an Izmir earthquake, but we felt it so powerfully.
“The common people need to know whether their buildings are prepared or not. Of course this (the Riza Bey) was a 30-year-old building, and we are now using better materials. But we still have questions about the quality of contractors, and if we had decent, institutionalised building inspections, we wouldn’t have this problem today.”
Turkey has long been at risk from seismic activity. Over 80,000 people have died due to earthquakes in the past century, and the area lies along many active fault lines.
In addition, planning laws and their upholding have long been subject to corruption and mismanagement.
In 2018, around 10 million buildings illegally built or renovated were given retrospective planning permission under a government amnesty, including many that did not meet safety criteria.
Selin Sayek Boke, general secretary of the opposition Republican People’s Party and an MP for Izmir, said: “We know that what has to be done to prevent losses in the event of earthquakes has not been done … Quality, regulation and supervision were never prioritised.”
Palestinians look to salvage Gaza’s history from the ruins of Israel’s military offensive
Great Omari Mosque in Gaza being hit by Israeli strikes in the two-year war muffled by an uncertain ceasefire
With major military operations halted, Palestinians are gaining a clearer picture of the destruction
Updated 5 sec ago
AP
GAZA CITY: Muneer Elbaz remembers the joy of visiting the Great Omari Mosque in Gaza with his family, praying at a site where people have worshipped over centuries as empires came and went. “These were the best days,” Elbaz said, as he recalled promenading through the lively markets around the mosque before the Israel-Hamas war. “This place transports us from one era to another.” Today, much of the mosque stands in ruins – like most of Gaza – after being hit by Israeli strikes in the two-year war muffled by an uncertain ceasefire. The sight of the rubble brings to mind “a tree that had been uprooted from the land,” said Elbaz, a Palestinian heritage consultant involved with recovery work at the site. Israel’s military offensive killed over 72,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, and erased entire extended families. Gone too is some of the heritage of a land with a rich history going back to ancient times. The mosque was built on a site where a Byzantine church had stood, and changed hands and even religions as one invader followed another. With major military operations halted, Palestinians are gaining a clearer picture of the destruction. Some organizations are trying to save what they can at historical sites, even as full-scale restoration – and the broader reconstruction of the territory – face major obstacles. Dozens of sites were damaged Israel launched its offensive after Hamas-led militants killed some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and took another 251 hostage in the Oct. 7, 2023, attack. The military accuses Hamas of concealing military assets beneath or near heritage sites, as well as other civilian structures. The UN cultural agency, in an ongoing assessment based on satellite images, says it has verified damage to at least 150 sites since the start of the war. They include 14 religious sites, 115 buildings of historical or artistic interest, nine monuments and eight archaeological sites. They are fragments of Gaza’s soul, connecting Palestinians to a place and a history that many fear is at risk of being erased. “These sites were an important element that solidifies the presence of the Palestinian people on this land and that represents the continuity of their cultural identity,” said Issam Juha, co-director of the Center for Cultural Heritage Preservation, based in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. “They want to erase the Palestinian identity and Palestinian heritage and ... to remove any connection that keeps the Palestinian society clinging to this land,” he said. The center is doing urgent rescue work at the badly damaged Pasha Palace, which housed centuries-old artifacts, many of which appear to have been looted, Juha said. Among the missing items are an Ottoman-era Qur’anic manuscript, jewelry from the medieval Mamluk era and a Roman-era sarcophagus from which only some fragments have been recovered, according to Hamouda Al-Dohdar, an expert working at the site. The Israeli military said it struck “a Hamas military compound and an anti-tank missile array” at the site. It said its forces struck a “terror tunnel” at the Omari mosque. It did not provide evidence in either case. Amir Abu Al-Omrain, an official with Gaza’s endowments ministry, part of the Hamas-run government, denied the allegation about the mosque. UNESCO does not have a mandate to assign responsibility for the damage it assesses. An independent commission established by the UN’s Human Rights Council said it was not aware of any evidence of a tunnel shaft in the mosque. Noting the Israeli allegations about the mosque, it said that even the presence of a “legitimate military objective … would not have justified the resulting damage.” Israel has previously accused the commission of bias. The centuries-old Saint Porphyrius Orthodox church complex, which had been sheltering displaced Palestinians, was also hit in an Israeli attack early in the war, causing deaths and injuries. The military said it had targeted a nearby Hamas command center. UNESCO said the church complex was moderately damaged. Some of Gaza’s heritage sites appear to have been spared. UNESCO said it has found no evidence of damage at the Saint Hilarion Monastery, dating to the 4th century. Under international law, cultural property should not be targeted or used for military purposes. The Israeli military says it takes the sensitivity of cultural and religious sites into account, aims to minimize damage to civilian infrastructure and adheres to international law. A rich history Artifacts and accounts stretching back thousands of years testify to Gaza’s long history of commerce and conflict. Egypt’s pharaohs sent chariots through the low-lying coastal strip in their wars with the Hittites in modern-day Turkiye. Traders in Gaza did brisk business with the ancient Greeks. The Omari mosque, named for Islam’s second caliph, was initially built in the seventh century. Centuries later, the Crusaders converted it into a cathedral, and it went back to being a mosque after they were expelled, said Stephennie Mulder, associate professor of Islamic art at the University of Texas at Austin. The mosque was damaged during World War I, when the British shelled Gaza in their campaign against the Ottoman Turks, and was later rebuilt. “The building itself told the story of Gaza’s past as a crossroads of trade, armies, empires, and religious traditions,” said Mulder. “For many Gazans, the Omari mosque stood as a beloved symbol of multiplicity, resilience and persistence.” More than stones Mohammad Shareef, 62, remembers attending prayers at the mosque with his father when he was a child, and studying for exams in its quiet confines. Years later, he would bring his own children there. He wept when it was hit. “We were raised in it and around it, and there’s no stone here that we haven’t stepped on,” he said. “For the people of Gaza, this is their history.” The loss will feel particularly acute during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, which begins later this month. Before the war, thousands converged on the mosque for Ramadan prayers amid a festive atmosphere. This year, a large tented structure has been erected. In recent days, workers have been filling wheelbarrows in the shadow of a damaged minaret. Hosni Almazloum, an engineer working at the site, said the mosque’s prayer hall ceiling had collapsed and columns had crumbled. He said it could be rebuilt, if construction supplies are allowed in. For now, teams have been focused on recovery and preventing further damage, sifting through and storing stones. The US-brokered ceasefire agreement, which halted most of the fighting in October, gives no timeline for Gaza’s reconstruction, which may prove impossible if Israel maintains the blockade it imposed on the territory when Hamas seized power in 2007, after the militant group won Palestinian elections in 2006. Many historic sites suffered from neglect before the war. The blockade and previous Israel-Hamas wars, along with a lack of resources and urban sprawl, posed challenges. Hamas-run authorities have leveled parts of what archaeologists believe was a Bronze Age settlement to make way for construction projects. Elbaz says that before the ceasefire, grief was a luxury he couldn’t afford – his family was just trying to survive. “What would you begin to cry over?” he asked. “The historic mosques or your home or your history or your children’s schools or the streets?” Now, as he processes the war’s toll, he sometimes weeps, away from the eyes of his children. “Gaza is our mother,” he said. “We have memories everywhere – in this tree, this flower, this garden and this mosque. Yes, we cry over every part of Gaza.”