Doctors Without Borders (MSF) load trucks for distribution at Atmeh Hospital
Natural Disasters

Türkiye Syria Earthquake: "There is no time to waste in reaching the people of this region"

According to the latest estimates, the earthquakes that hit Turkey and Syria have killed more than 35,000 people and injured tens of thousands more. Doctors Without Borders (MSF) works with affected populations in northwestern Syria with nearly 500 staff members. At the time of the disaster, MSF was already there, supporting local communities in the northwest, victims of more than 12 years of war. Here are the latest updates on the situation from Ahmed Rahmo, MSF project coordinator, who is based in the Idlib region and based in Gaziantep in Turkey.

 

Ahmed Rahmo Idleb, MSF Project Coordinator Four days after the earthquakes, our teams continue their emergency response in northwestern Syria. We have received very little international support from the outside so far. Our work is essential, but it is also a drop in the ocean: the needs are immense in the region. We are addressing basic needs, providing food and water and providing medical care.
Doctors Without Borders (MSF) Project Coordinator Ahmed Rahmo Idleb

Given the lack of funds for humanitarian aid and difficulties in accessing this landlocked area, most Syrian hospitals were already facing many difficulties and shortages. Moving supplies and medicines from Turkey into Syria was already a challenge, as Bab al-Hawa was the only crossing point for the humanitarian convoy to northwest Syria and was subject to political tensions before the disaster.

After the earthquakes, this crossing point was closed for three days and only reopened yesterday, with very little traffic so far. Humanitarian organizations working inside Northwest Syria have dipped into their emergency stocks that were on site. There is no time to waste in reaching the people of this region, as the delivery of supplies is crucial. There are two million people living in displacement camps, often in tents exposed to the wind.

Residents of Atmeh given an MSF tent for shelter
Every day, our teams share tragic stories with us. Some of the survivors, who are not hospitalized, have lost everything: their homes, their clothes, access to food, sometimes part of their family, their money, everything… Ahmed Rahmo, MSF project coordinator

Just a week before the earthquake, a snowstorm had hit the area. Living conditions have significantly deteriorated. We have made donations of heating equipment, blankets and mattresses, all essential in these weather conditions, as temperatures reach negative figures at night. Today, an increasing number of people have been forced to join these camps, and reception centres have been opened to accommodate more displaced people. There are 15 in the Idlib region for now, and we have launched mobile clinics to offer medical consultations in five of these. We will expand this activity in the coming days.

MSF teams have also intervened by donating medical items to more than 10 hospitals. We are responding to a variety of needs, which relate in particular to traumatology, obstetrical care or dialysis. We have also sent some of our medical staff from our hospital in Atmeh, which specializes in the care of burn victims, to support other hospitals whose staff have been overwhelmed by the number of injured. Our surgeons were able to help them. We have also mobilized our ambulances to be used for transfers between hospitals.
 

Every day, our teams share tragic stories with us. When not hospitalized, some survivors have lost everything: their homes, their clothes, access to food, sometimes part of their family, their money, everything...and now they live in tents. They need clothes, hygiene products, water and food and everything. 

Humanitarian organizations must also protect these populations against cholera, which has recently spread in the region since last September and proliferates in precarious conditions and lack of access to clean water. The MSF teams have tackled this disease in the past months, but our organization can’t cover all the needs, especially as the general situation worsens. For many region inhabitants, living conditions have become even direr.