clear

Creating new perspectives since 2009

Defying odds: A story of survival under Turkiye earthquake rubble

February 15, 2023 at 6:33 pm

Rescue team members try to warm up around fire as search and rescue efforts continue in collapsed buildings after 7.7 and 7.6 magnitude earthquakes hit multiple provinces of Turkiye [Muhittin Sandıkçı/Mert Türker]

Huseyin Berber’s voice was hoarse from calling for help from under the rubble of his home, but he was finally freed more than a week after Turkiye’s massive earthquake, defying the odds for survival and one of several remarkable stories to emerge, Reuters reports.

Doctors say people can last, even without water, for days. But there are so many variables – what injuries were sustained in a building collapse, and how hot or cold it is outside – that rescuers say anything after five days is miraculous.

Berber, a 62-year-old diabetic, survived 187 hours after the walls of his ground floor flat were propped up by a fridge and a cabinet, leaving him an armchair to sit in and a rug to keep him warm.

He had a single bottle of water and, when that ran out, he drank his own urine.

Berber was speaking from a bed at Mersin City Hospital, some 250 km from the 15-storey building that collapsed in the city of Antakya in southern Hatay province, where half the buildings were either destroyed or heavily damaged. He was admitted on Tuesday.

He said he had been surrounded by relatives in different rooms in his apartment, all of whom he believes managed to survive.

“When the earthquake hit, I immediately stood up, my grandchild was sleeping next to me. I looked around, my son turned on a light, took a flashlight and said ‘Father, it’s an earthquake!’

“In a second tremor, the ceiling collapsed, but it did not touch me. I immediately crouched, sat down. The wall fell over on to fridge and the cabinet. I was stuck there. There was a rug. I took that and put it over me … I saw there was an armchair, I climbed over it took the rug and sat there.

“I shouted, shouted and shouted. No one was hearing me. I shouted so much that my throat hurt. Our son, I think took out the kids … we were five people, my son and I were in the bedroom.”

He said he found his diabetes medicine and a bottle of water on the floor.

READ: In Syria, a child is saved but loses his family

“An hour later, I took (the water bottle) and drank it. Apologies, I peed in it and let it rest. I drank it when it got cold. I saved myself with that.”

‘Someone reached their hand out’ 

A member of the Turkish medical rescue team said people under the rubble can generally survive up to five days. “Anything beyond five days is a miracle,” he said.

Deniz Gezer, internal medicine specialist at Mersin City Hospital, said one of the biggest problems for survival was the cold.

“But some of the patients stayed in closed areas, so they can live under buildings, in small closed spaces. Some have water with them.”

As for drinking urine, Gezer said it was not recommended.

“Since urine is a toxic substance, we do not recommend our patients drink it, because it does not meet their water needs anyway, and they also ingest toxic substances.”

Berber, in his hospital bed, surrounded by beeping machines, said he thought no one would save him.

“I was here, they were there. I climbed next to the cabinet, I am reaching out to the ceiling but I cannot touch it. But on the other side of the room it collapsed on to the bed. Our son brought three diggers, they are digging. I was hitting the ceiling, I saw it is punctured, I heard a voice, I shouted.

“Someone reached their hand out and it met with my hand. They pulled me out from there. The hole I got out from was very small. That scared me a bit.

“I do not remember anything after they pulled me out. I was rescued, I got out; I wanted water and food, especially water. I did not eat anything, there was nothing to eat.

“… It means I did good deeds with Allah; I stayed in Mecca seven years, haj, umra, prayers, for everyone not only for my family. I think because of that, God saved me.”

Caglar Aksoy Colak, a doctor at Mersin City Hospital, said doctors only provided “supportive treatment” for Berber.

“He has no broken bones; his general status is fairly good … He actually inspired himself down there. Our patient came out in a very good condition.”

WATCH: CCTV shows terrifying moment earthquake hits Turkiye