Two killed in Turkiye building collapse

Turkish police officers stand guard as they surround the area around Esenyurt Municipality Building. (AFP)
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Updated 25 January 2025
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Two killed in Turkiye building collapse

  • TV images showed emergency workers sifting through a large pile of rubble on Saturday morning following the collapse the previous evening

ANKARA: Rescuers pulled the bodies of a 23-year-old woman and a man believed to be her husband from under a collapsed apartment building in central Turkiye on Saturday, state-run media said.
Three other people were rescued from the wreckage and were being treated in a hospital, Anadolu Agency reported.
The collapse comes amid renewed focus on building safety following the deaths of 78 people in a fire Tuesday that ripped through a 12-story hotel at a ski resort in northwestern Turkiye.
Investigators are examining whether proper fire prevention measures were in place.
Interior Minister Ali Yerlikaya said on Saturday that 79 people were registered as living in the four-story apartment block in the city of Konya, some 260 km south of the capital, Ankara.
Earlier, Yerlikaya said the last two people remaining under the debris were Syrian nationals.
He added that the cause of the building collapse was not immediately known. “If there is a fault, negligence or anything else, we will learn it together,” he told journalists.
TV images showed emergency workers sifting through a large pile of rubble on Saturday morning following the collapse the previous evening.
Four people linked to businesses operating on the building’s ground floor were detained as part of the investigation. The second anniversary of an earthquake that hit southern Turkiye and north Syria, killing more than 59,000 people, is just two weeks away.
The high death toll at the time was due in part to building safety regulations being ignored.
In 2004, a 12-story apartment building collapsed in Konya, claiming the lives of 92 people and injuring some 30 others.
Structural flaws and negligence were blamed for the collapse.

 


Israeli military says its forces shot dead Palestinian rock-thrower in West Bank

Updated 21 min 12 sec ago
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Israeli military says its forces shot dead Palestinian rock-thrower in West Bank

  • Palestinian Red Crescent said one person had been killed and one wounded in the incident
  • Israeli settler attacks on Palestinians have risen sharply, while military has tightened movement restrictions and carried out sweeping raids in several citie

RAMALLAH: Israeli soldiers shot at three Palestinians who were throwing rocks at cars in the occupied West Bank on Sunday and killed one of them, the Israeli military said.
The Palestinian Red Crescent said one person had been killed and one wounded in the incident. There was no immediate comment from Palestinian officials. The Israeli military said that apart from the fatality, one other person was “neutralized” and one arrested.
A day earlier, Israeli soldiers killed a Palestinian teenager who was driving a car toward them as well as a bystander at a checkpoint in the West Bank city of Hebron.
The military initially said two “terrorists” were killed after soldiers opened fire at a car accelerating toward them, before later clarifying that only one was involved.
An Israeli security official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said a 17-year-old was driving the car and that a 55-year-old bystander was the second person killed.
Palestinian state news agency WAFA reported that 55-year-old Ziad Naim Abu Dawood, a municipal street cleaner, was killed while working. It said another Palestinian was killed but did not report the circumstances that led the soldiers to open fire.
The Palestinian health ministry identified the teen as 17-year-old Ahmed Khalil Al-Rajabi.
The military did not report any injuries to the soldiers.
Violence has surged this year in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. Israeli settler attacks on Palestinians have risen sharply, while the military has tightened movement restrictions and carried out sweeping raids in several cities.
Since January, 51 Palestinian minors, aged under 18, have been killed in the West Bank by Israeli forces, according to the Palestinian health ministry.
Palestinians have also carried out attacks on Israeli soldiers and civilians, some of them deadly.