Türkiye building container cities for quake-hit evacuees: Soylu

The Turkish interior minister says that evacuated citizens will return to their places after cities begin to normalise and denies rumours of disease outbreak in the quake zone.

Initial financial aid of $530 has been provided to nearly 336,000 families so far, Soylu says.
AP

Initial financial aid of $530 has been provided to nearly 336,000 families so far, Soylu says.

The residents evacuated from the quake-hit cities of Türkiye will return to their hometowns once container cities are set up and affected areas normalised, the Turkish interior minister has said.

"When cities begin to normalise and container cities are set up, our evacuated citizens will, of course, return to their cities," Suleyman Soylu said in a statement on Wednesday on the aftermath of the quakes in southeastern Türkiye, which left thousands of buildings levelled.

"Maybe their first year won’t be the same as before, we will try to make sure their needs are catered to," he added.

Speaking at the Disaster Coordination Center in Kahramanmaras, the province at the epicentres of last week’s 7.7 and 7.6 magnitude earthquakes, Soylu added that initial financial aid of $530 (10,000 liras) has been provided to nearly 336,000 families so far.

READ MORE: Turkish mother hopes to return home in earthquake-hit Hatay

Rebuilding cities

Soylu also shot down claims that there is an outbreak of the acute intestinal disease in quake-hit areas, adding that the Health Ministry is vigilant over any epidemic.

Soylu said that approximately 200,000 tents have been sent to the quake zone as temporary shelters and many were already set up.

Adding that approximately 100,000 more tents will be sent, Soylu said: "Living spaces will be built inside containers. Places for these have been determined and infrastructure is being built. This is a one-year process,” he said.

On the scale of the destruction, Soylu said nearly one-fourth of the buildings in Kahramanmaras suffered damage, and that half of the housing in Antakya, Hatay were either demolished by the quakes or needed to be demolished as part of efforts to rebuild the city.

Sustainable kitchens

Emphasizing that the soup kitchens in the earthquake area should be sustainable for at least a year, Soylu said, "We need to make the needs of the soup kitchens for cooking and serving our nation sustainable. We also need to make dry food, clean and brand-new clothing sustainable.”

On Turkish authorities’ efforts to provide safety and security to the communities in quake-hit provinces, Soylu also said security forces in quake zones have been beefed up threefold to ensure coordination of humanitarian efforts and to maintain order.

READ MORE: 50,000 buildings face demolition after deadly Türkiye quake

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