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Ballito search and rescue team joins recovery effort after massive earthquake in the Middle East

Three Medi Response KZN team-members have arrived in Turkey and will travel to the hardest hit areas later this evening.

Three Medi Response KZN search and rescue team-members have joined an international effort to assist in earthquake-affected areas in Turkey and Syria.

The earthquake, measuring 7.8 on the Richter scale, hit south-east Turkey near Gaziantep on Monday morning and has affected an estimated 13.5 million people.

At the time of publication, the death toll had reached 11 200, with thousands more injured and missing.

That number is expected to rise as the area is experiencing frigid weather conditions, with temperatures as low as -5 degrees recorded overnight.

The Gift of the Givers team before taking off from Johannesburg yesterday evening.
Photo: Medi Response KZN.

In response to the disaster, the Gift of the Givers Foundation put together a team to travel to the area and provide help on the ground, three of whom are Medi Response KZN members.

“The Gift of the Givers picked a team of 25 from across the country. We will be deployed alongside teams from Korea, Japan, Russia and the USA to help with search and rescue operations as thousands of buildings have collapsed and thousands of people are still missing,” said Medi Response spokesperson, Paul Herbst.

The group will travel to one of 10 cities that were among the worst affected.

“We arrived in Turkey this morning, around 48 hours after the initial earthquake. We are currently awaiting a two-hour domestic flight this evening which was delayed because the weather has made flying difficult,” Herbst said.

The Gift of the Givers team will be deployed alongside teams from across the globe, including this team from Japan, pictured landing in Turkey.
Photo: Medi Response KZN.

Once they touch down later tonight, the team has two hours of further ground travel to negotiate, after which it will be full days of search and rescue work.

Per Reuters reports, internal aid has been slow to arrive, leaving thousands of people at risk as they brace for further poor weather conditions.

“Hypothermia is a significant worry, which means finding these people as quickly as possible is very important,” said Herbst.


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James Anderson

James has been at The North Coast Courier since 2020, covering sport, culture and municipal news. If he's not on his 10th cup of coffee trying to make deadline, you can probably find him watching any and all South African sport and the latest movie releases.
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