Sunday, 17 Nov 2024

Syria: newborn, still joined to dead mother, pulled alive from earthquake rubble

Syria: newborn, still joined to dead mother, pulled alive from earthquake rubble


Syria: newborn, still joined to dead mother, pulled alive from earthquake rubble
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The infant is the sole survivor of her immediate family, the rest of whom were all killed when the 7.8-magnitude earthquake that struck Syria and neighbouring Turkey flattened the family home in the rebel-held town of Jindayris, said relative Khalil al-Suwadi.

Video of the rescue went viral on social media.

The footage shows a man sprinting from the rubble of a collapsed four-storey building clutching a tiny baby covered in dust.

A second man runs towards the first, carrying a blanket to try to warm the newborn in the sub-zero temperatures, while a third screams for a car to take her to hospital.

The baby was taken for treatment in the nearby town of Afrin, while family members spent the next several hours recovering the bodies of her father, Abdullah, mother Afraa, four siblings and an aunt.

In the dimly lit room, Suwadi stared at the lifeless corpses and listed their names.

The family home was one of about 50 in Jindayris that were flattened by the earthquake, an AFP correspondent reported.

Across Syria, more than 1,600 people were killed, in addition to the more than 3,400 killed in Turkey, authorities said.

Rebel-held towns and cities accounted for 800 of the dead.

Inside an incubator in the hospital in Afrin, the newborn was hooked to an intravenous drip, her body scarred, and a bandage wrapped around her left fist.

Her forehead and fingers were still blue from the biting cold as paediatrician Hani Maarouf monitored her vitals.

Jindayris was seized by Turkey and its Syrian rebel proxies in a 2018 offensive that drove Kurdish forces from the Afrin region.

Cut off from government-held territory, the region depends heavily on aid from Turkey and lacks the expertise or manpower to mount an effective emergency response on its own.

With Turkish NGOs preoccupied with the rescue effort across the border, the search for survivors in Syrian towns such as Jindayris has been delayed.

According to the White Helmets rescue group, which operates in rebel-held areas of Syria, more than 210 buildings have been flattened in those areas.

Another 520 were partly destroyed, while thousands more were damaged, it said.

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