UK firefighters rescue trapped mother in Turkiye, reunite her with new-born daughter

Emotional video showed UK firefighters reunite a mother trapped under the rubble in Turkiye with her new-born daughter. (Twitter: @LondonFire)
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Updated 11 February 2023
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UK firefighters rescue trapped mother in Turkiye, reunite her with new-born daughter

  • Woman was trapped under collapsed building for 4 days after Monday’s earthquakes

LONDON: London firefighters have rescued a mother who was trapped under a collapsed building in Turkiye for four days and reunited her with her new-born daughter.

Footage circulating on social media captured the moment when Dom Mabbett and his team from Edmonton fire station pulled the woman from a tiny gap within a mountain of debris, before leading her to her child who was waiting on a nearby street.

Mabbett is just one of the 77 members of the UK’s Fire & Rescue Service’s International Search & Rescue team dispatched to Turkiye following Monday’s earthquakes.

Responding to the footage, London Fire Brigade tweeted: “This is the incredible moment our ISAR team helped reunite a mother and daughter four days after the Turkey earthquake struck.”

 

 

This follows an effort earlier in the week in which British rescuers coordinated with a team of German volunteers in the rescue of a woman and her 5-year-old son.

Serap Topal, 33, who sustained crush injuries, and her son Mehmet were trapped for three days after their home in Kahramanmaras — one of the cities closest to the epicenter — collapsed before their rescue. 


Turkish and Greek leaders set for talks on migration, maritime borders

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Turkish and Greek leaders set for talks on migration, maritime borders

  • Fifteen migrants died in a shipwreck off the Greek island of Chios last week after their boat collided with a Greek coast guard vessel and sank in the Aegean Sea off the Turkish coast
ANKARA: Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan ‌will host Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis on Wednesday for talks likely to focus on migration and longstanding maritime disputes, as the ​NATO allies and historic rivals try to build on warming ties.
Fifteen migrants died in a shipwreck off the Greek island of Chios last week after their boat collided with a Greek coast guard vessel and sank in the Aegean Sea off the Turkish coast.
Mitsotakis will be accompanied by ministers responsible for foreign affairs, finance, ‌development and migration, ‌Greek officials said.
Developments in the Middle ​East, ‌Iran ⁠and ​Ukraine, migration, trade ⁠and organized crime are also likely to be on the agenda.
Greek Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Lana Zochiou said on Tuesday the aim was “to assess the progress of bilateral cooperation” and “to keep communication channels open to defuse any potential crises.”
Turkiye is a transit country for migrants seeking to ⁠reach the European Union via Greece. Ankara ‌says the EU has not ‌fully delivered on commitments under a ​2016 migration deal and ‌Athens wants Turkiye to do more to curb irregular ‌crossings.
Despite a thaw in rhetoric since a 2023 declaration on friendly relations, the neighbors are at odds over maritime boundaries in the Aegean, an area widely believed to hold energy resources ‌and with implications for airspace and military activity.
Ankara said last month it had issued ⁠a maritime ⁠notice urging Greece to coordinate research activities in areas of the Aegean that Turkiye considers part of its continental shelf.
Greece’s foreign minister had said Athens planned to extend its territorial waters further, including potentially in the Aegean.
In 1995, Turkiye’s parliament declared a casus belli — a cause for war — should Greece unilaterally extend its territorial waters beyond six nautical miles in the Aegean, a stance Athens says violates international maritime law. Greece says it wants ​only to discuss ​demarcation of maritime zones.