Tear gas used to disperse quake protesters

VAN, Turkey – Riot police fired tear gas and used batons to disperse protesters angry at the state’s relief efforts after the…

VAN, Turkey – Riot police fired tear gas and used batons to disperse protesters angry at the state’s relief efforts after the second earthquake in eastern Turkey in three weeks killed at least 12 people in the city of Van.

Rescue teams searched for survivors after the 5.7 magnitude tremor on Wednesday night heaped misery on the predominantly Kurdish region where more than 600 people died following a major quake on October 23rd.

“How can you fire pepper spray on people who have already suffered so much?” said Abdulrahim Kaplan (32). He had gone to the crisis centre for a tent when police began firing tear gas, he said.

“Our people are freezing. We are sleeping outside – all seven of my family ... Some people take five tents, some 10 and others get nothing. This is wrong.”

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Thousands of families are living in makeshift camps with temperatures falling to freezing. The government says there are enough tents for anyone who needs them.

About 200 demonstrators called for the resignation of the provincial governor in a rally close to two city-centre hotels that collapsed during the latest quake.

“We are urging the earthquake survivors to lodge in the tent cities. We think it is safer and we have enough place for everybody who wants to stay at the tent city,” the deputy prime minister Besir Atalay said later.

“Preparations are under way for more tents,” said the minister, who is overseeing relief operations and had visited the site of the collapsed hotels earlier. Working through the night, searchers had rescued 28 people from the ruins, Turkey’s Disaster and Emergency Administration said.

Two of those brought out, including a 16-month-old infant, were flown by air ambulance to a hospital in the capital, Ankara.

Rescue workers pulled a Japanese woman from the rubble of the Bayram Hotel almost six hours after the quake but a Japanese doctor succumbed to his injuries.

The woman, Miyuki Konnai, was part of a rescue and relief team sent to Van from Japan after the first quake. She was found injured but conscious and could be seen talking to her rescuers as she was carried to an ambulance.

The 32-year-old woman said she had been too afraid to open her eyes when she lay trapped beneath the rubble. “When I finally managed to open my left eye slowly, there was a ray of light I could see in what I thought was complete darkness. That light gave me a relief and gave me a hope to live. That was the light from the computer I had been using,” she said.

Mr Atalay, who visited the devastated Bayram Hotel with the foreign minister, said all but two of the 25 buildings that collapsed in Van had been empty. The owner of the flattened five-storey hotel, Aslan Bayram, told broadcasters building experts had given his 47-year-old property the all-clear after last month’s quake. At the time of the quake, about 15 guests were believed to be in the hotel.

Many people were too frightened to return to homes with cracked walls as aftershocks continued to rattle the region. Turkey is criss-crossed with seismic fault lines and experiences small tremors most days. About 20,000 people were killed by two large earthquakes in western Turkey in 1999. – (Reuters)