
Syria faces slow recovery a year after earthquake
Clip: 2/6/2024 | 8m 29sVideo has Closed Captions
Survivors face slow recovery in northwestern Syria a year after devastating earthquake
One year ago, a devastating earthquake laid waste to large parts of southern Turkey and northwestern Syria. Tens of thousands were killed and recovery has been slow and agonizing, especially in Syria, where more than a decade of war had already made life unbearable. Leila Molana-Allen reports on how Syrians on both sides of the border are struggling to survive.
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Syria faces slow recovery a year after earthquake
Clip: 2/6/2024 | 8m 29sVideo has Closed Captions
One year ago, a devastating earthquake laid waste to large parts of southern Turkey and northwestern Syria. Tens of thousands were killed and recovery has been slow and agonizing, especially in Syria, where more than a decade of war had already made life unbearable. Leila Molana-Allen reports on how Syrians on both sides of the border are struggling to survive.
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipwaste to large parts of Southern# Turkey and Northwestern Syria.
Tens of thousands of people were killed,# and recovery has been slow and agonizing,## especially in Syria, where more than a decade of# civil war had already made life nearly unbearable.
Leila Molana-Allen reports on how Syrians on both# sides of the border are struggling to survive.
LEILA MOLANA-ALLEN: In this small corner of# Northwest Syria, more than 6,000 people died## in last year's earthquakes, which# struck in the middle of the night.
But with few resources and all access to# the area controlled by Turkey and blocked## by the Assad regime, there's been limited# recovery.
Half-destroyed buildings still## loom.
Overwhelmed and underfunded medical teams# do what they can to help the injured rehabilitate.
Hamza al-Ahmad lay pinned beneath the rubble# of his home for 35 hours before local volunteer## rescuers, known as the White Helmets, managed# to dig him out alive.
He was one of the lucky## ones.
With the border closed, rescuers# had little equipment and no international## assistance.
So most Syrians who were buried# under collapsed buildings died waiting for help.
It was too late for Hamza's# parents and four brothers.
HAMZA AL-AHMAD (Injured and Displaced in# Earthquake) (through translator): I lost## that all my family had died.
My life# with my family was beautiful.
I had## a little brother.
We used to do# everything together.
But he died.
Now, whenever I see small child in the road, I# remember my little brother.
I miss him so much.
LEILA MOLANA-ALLEN: Hamza lost his leg from the# hip down and his arm is nearly paralyzed.
Now## he needs multiple surgeries he can't afford.# At just 15, Hamza is learning to live with## only half of his body fully functioning.
He# knows he's fortunate to have a prosthetic leg,## which cost hundreds of dollars and# which many others are still waiting for.
But the rudimentary model is# incredibly painful to use.
HAMZA AL-AHMAD (through# translator): Before my injuries,## I used to play f I can't fit the prosthetic rods.
It's# a prosthetic limb, and I'm not used to## it.
So I end up just using crutches.
I'm# trying to get used the limb, but it hurts.
LEILA MOLANA-ALLEN: Hamza's only# surviving brother, Abdul Hadi,## now cares for him.
There's no work,# but they have found a small room to## stay in.
The alternative is a life spent# under a thin tarp, like their neighbors.
Much of the worst-hit area remains in ruins.# With the economy already destroyed after 13## years of war, there's no money, and tight import# controls mean scant materials to rebuild with;## 800,000 people are still waiting to be rehoused.# They live in filthy, disease-rid en camps, wading## through freezing mud and breathing in a toxic# smoke from burning whatever they can to stay warm.
This isn't the first time Nofa and# Abdo's family has been displaced.## They fled the Idlib countryside after her son# was killed in a Russian airstrike.
Since t they have raised their three young# grandchildren, Jinan, Ufran and Ibrahim,## alone.
The town of Jindires wasn't home, but# at least they had a roof over their heads.
But when the earthquake hit,# that new home collapsed.
ABDO QUTAISH, Camp Resident (through# translator): Here in the camps,## it is if but we have no options.
Where do# we go?
Where should we escape?
LEILA MOLANA-ALLEN: Abdo recovered from his# injuries, but Nofa still can't move her legs.## They can barely afford to look after the kids,# let alone pay for the specialist care he needs.
NOFA QUTAISH, Camp Resident (through# translator): My husband helps me in## our daily life i because I cannot walk.
And if I want# to move, I crawl on my hands and feet The children are deprived of many# of their rights and want of clothes,## food and heating.
I wish they# could live a better life.
LEILA MOLANA-ALLEN: Drinking water is# scarce, while dirty rainwater floods## the alleyways in the freezing weather,# soaking everything inside the tent Even before the earthquake, most of the people# living in this beleaguered enclave needed## humanitarian aid to survive.
The huge influx of# donations and aid in the earthquake's aftermath## soon dried up.
The World Food Program is ending# its main Syria assistance program later this year.## And last year, the U.N.'s Syrian aid budget# only got a third of the funds that it needed.
The family has had no help in# months.
They feel forgotten.
ABDO QUTAISH (through translator):# International organizations should## come and see how earthquake ne eds we face.
We only dream of a life in# which we have a small portion of dignity.
LEILA MOLANA-ALLEN: Thousands of Syrian refugees## who had been living in Souther the border in its wake.
But conditions# for those who stayed aren't much better.
Antakya in far Southern Turkey was# leveled.
There's little left of this proud,## ancient city.
Far more reconstruction has# taken place on this side of the border,## but there's next to no help available for# Syrians.
The dust from building debris## here is so thick that it's very difficult# to breathe.
But just a few meters away,## dozens of Syrian refugees are living in the# middle of the rubble that used to be their homes.
When the earthquake struck Omar# Barakat's rundown tower block,## it fell within seconds.
Omar tried to rescue# his wife, Judy, and 2-year Taim, but couldn't lift the heavy# ceilings labs that crushed them.
OMAR BARAKAT, Syrian Refugee (through# translator): I tried to get them out,## but couldn't.
Taim staye and he didn't move at all.
I stayed# awake talking to them until 10:30 in## the morning.
I fell asleep and my wife# was alive.
I woke up and she was dead.
I started calling her name,# but she didn't make a sound.
LEILA MOLANA-ALLEN: They died next to# him, but his 3-year-old son, Ahmed,## had disappeared.
For weeks, Omar searched# hospitals across Southern Tu home had been destroyed and the rubble# cleared.
But there was no sign of Ahmed.
As thousands of other families searched for# missing loved ones, the Turkish forensics## unit tested a DNA sample and said Ahmed's body# hadn't been identified amongst those killed.
OMAR BARAKAT (through translator): They# told me maybe he got picked up by the## forklift that collects the rubble he's only little.
But I don't believe# it.
My heart believes that he's alive.
LEILA MOLANA-ALLEN: Omar is from# Aleppo.
Like many Syrians here,## his permit to be in Turkey has# now expired and the authorities# have cracked down.
But if Omar returns# to Syria, he risks arrest, or worse.
OMAR BARAKAT (through translator): I'm very# afraid, but if they want to deport me while## my son is missing, they would have to kill# me to get me t worse can they do to me now that I have lost my# precious boy?
My future is already long gone.
LEILA MOLANA-ALLEN: Shrouded in his# grief, he spends his days visiting## the site of his family's last moments,# comforted by mementos of his bu t against all odds, he's# determined Ahmed is alive.
And so he waits, hiding in this# tent bought on the black market,## surrounded by street after# street of crumbling masonry.
OMAR BARAKAT (through translator): I always# wake up in the middle of the night.
I go for## a walk.
I look at the destruction and think,# my LEILA MOLANA-ALLEN: A shattered life, one among# thousands.
Living through yet another nightmare,## Syrians on both sides of the border here# fear suffering is all they have left.
For the "PBS NewsHour," I'm Leila# Molana-Allen in Antakya, Southern Turkey.
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