Quake-prone Istanbul not at heightened risk: expert

A screen displays latest earthquakes on a map of turkey at the Kandilli Observatory’s Regional Earthquake-Tsunami Monitoring Center in Istanbul on Feb. 23,2023. (AFP)
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Updated 25 February 2023
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Quake-prone Istanbul not at heightened risk: expert

ISTANBUL: Fears of another major earthquake have been rekindled in Istanbul since the February 6 disaster that hit Turkiye and Syria, but a prominent Turkish seismologist has reassured the risk “hasn’t increased.”
“The risk hasn’t increased because we are talking about completely different systems,” Dogan Kalafat, the director of the Kandilli Observatory’s Earthquake-Tsunami Monitoring Center in Istanbul, told AFP.
Turkiye’s most populated city is situated near the North Anatolian Fault while the recent 7.8-magnitude quake that killed 43,500 people occurred along another fault in the country’s southeast, Kalafat explained.
Still, the 16 million residents of Istanbul, a city that spreads over two continents and has seen skyscrapers mushroom in recent years, are wondering if they’re ready for the “Big One.”
“I’d like to say it, but sadly, it’s a very big city with too many poorly constructed buildings,” said Kalafat, who has denounced using low-quality cement and building on “soft soils.”
While waiting for a large-scale quake, “we must make good use of the time. We must build earthquake-proof houses on solid soil. It’s the most important precaution to take,” the seismologist stressed.
At the observatory, seismologists take turns every eight hours watching a series of computer screens monitoring potential tremors.
In front of them, on a wall at least five meters (16 feet) tall, a giant screen provides real-time readings from 260 seismic stations across the country.
“Nine thousand aftershocks have taken place in Turkiye since February 6,” which is more than “seven or eight times normal,” Kalafat said.
On one of the desks, a laminated map shows the North Anatolian Fault, which crosses the Sea of Marmara, only “15 to 17 kilometers” from the southern shores of Istanbul, Kalafat said.
In 2001, two years after a 7.4-magnitude quake left 17,000 people dead in northwest Turkiye, Kalafat calculated a 65 percent probability that a quake with a magnitude above 7 would occur before 2030 in the same region — which includes Istanbul.
The risk climbed to 75 percent in 50 years and 95 percent in 90 years.
“These statistics are still relevant,” said Kalafat, adding: “even with the technology of today, it is impossible to predict an earthquake.”
“We can indicate, with a certain margin of error, where an earthquake can occur and what magnitude it can be, but we can’t know when it will occur,” he said.
The Kandilli Observatory has developed an early warning system “but Istanbul is too close to the fault line” for a system to be effective, Kalafat said.
On one of the desks, sitting between two screens, is a black telephone with two red labels with the public disaster management agency’s acronym, allowing scientists to send an alert for a major earthquake.
The early warning could win “a maximum of seven or eight seconds” — not enough time to allow inhabitants to get to safety.
In comparison, the telephonic warning system in Japan’s Tohoku region, which was struck by a devastating earthquake and tsunami in March 2011, buys the public 45 seconds.
“There, you can send a message warning citizens, but we don’t have this possibility here,” he said.


Israeli police kill Bedouin man during raid in southern Israel, local official says

Updated 04 January 2026
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Israeli police kill Bedouin man during raid in southern Israel, local official says

  • The shooting of 36-year-old Muhammed Hussein Tarabin threatened to worsen the already strained relations between the Israeli government and the country’s Bedouin minority

TEL AVIV: Israeli police shot and killed a Bedouin Arab man during an overnight raid in his village in southern Israel, according to media reports and a local official.
The shooting of 36-year-old Muhammed Hussein Tarabin threatened to worsen the already strained relations between the Israeli government and the country’s Bedouin minority.
Israeli police have been conducting a large-scale operation in the village of Tarabin for the past week in what they describe as a crackdown on local crime.
Talal Alkernawi, the mayor of the nearby town of Rahat, confirmed the man’s death.
Israeli police said they opened fire on a man who had “endangered” forces during an arrest raid.
The Israeli news site Haaretz cited relatives as saying Tarabin, whose family name shares the name of the village, was in his home.
In a video statement, Tarabin’s 11-year-old son, Hussein, said that men in uniform came to their house at night. He heard shots and saw his father’s body lying on the ground.
Israel’s far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, who oversees the police force, expressed support for the police. “Anyone who endangers our police officers and fighters must be neutralized,” he posted on X.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Sunday that the country would do everything to prevent the Negev desert in southern Israel from becoming the “wild south”. He congratulated Ben-Gvir on leading the initiative and said he would visit the region in the coming days.
Israel’s more than 200,000 Bedouin are the poorest members of the country’s Arab minority, which also includes Christian and Muslim urban communities. Israel’s Arab population makes up roughly 20 percent of the country’s 10 million people. While they are citizens with the right to vote, they often suffer discrimination and tend to identify with Palestinians in the occupied West Bank and the Gaza Strip.
The Bedouin sector has grappled with crime and poverty, and about one-third of its members live in villages that the Israeli government considers illegal. Israel says it is trying to bring order to a lawless area, but Bedouin leaders accuse the government of neglect, trying to destroy their way of life or pushing to relocate them to less desirable areas.
Residents say police have made around two dozen arrests in the village of Tarabin over the past week. Nati Yefet, a spokesman for the regional council of unrecognized villages in the area, said most have been quickly released.
“They’re looking for people, crime-related things, but they didn’t find anything,” Yefet said. He accused Ben-Gvir of intensifying the raids in the run-up to elections expected later this year.
Marwan Abu Frieh, of the Arab rights group Adalah, said Israel has stepped up house demolitions in recent years, leaving thousands of residents without shelter and worsening the plight of communities often denied basic services.