Close X
Saturday, October 5, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadian rescuers return from Turkey quake zone

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Feb, 2023 10:36 AM
  • Canadian rescuers return from Turkey quake zone

VANCOUVER - A volunteer search and rescue team that self-deployed to Turkey's earthquake zone has returned to Vancouver to a hero’s welcome after spending days combing through the rubble as part of the international lifesaving efforts.

The 10-person Burnaby Urban Search and Rescue team, comprised of mostly first responders from the city's fire department, flew to Turkey with the blessing of the country's government.

Arriving in Vancouver on a flight from Istanbul, members of the team touched down Tuesday afternoon following a weeklong deployment in the Turkish city of Adiyaman.

A large group from Vancouver’s Turkish community waved Canadian and Turkish flags, breaking out into applause and chants of “welcome home USAR” as the team emerged from the arrivals gate.

Norm MacLeod, a deputy chief with the White Rock Fire Department who led the team in Turkey, said he’s grateful to be home after being surprised by the scale of the devastation.

MacLeod said his team had honed their skills in Nepal in 2015, a “disaster in its own right,” saying that the destruction in Turkey was “much larger” in scale.

Christina Mohammed and her three children awaited her husband Shawn, a Burnaby firefighter and member of the team, to return after a week away helping with the relief efforts.

Mohammed said she wasn’t worried because “they are part of such a highly skilled team and many of them had been deployed before together, and so you just trust that they’re safe, they’re taking care of each other, and they’re there to do good work.”

“It was hard not knowing where they were, but it was nice to see his face on TV when they were rescuing the lady,” she said.

The team said they picked a woman out of the rubble and she suffered minor kidney damage but is “resting comfortably” following her rescue.

The Canadian government pledged $10 million in aid soon after the quakes, and collection campaigns for food, clothing, and monetary donations soon popped up in multiple Canadian cities.

The team deployed a day after the Feb. 7 quakes that rocked Turkey and Syria, killing more than 35,000 people and levelling thousands of buildings.

Taylan Tokmak, Turkey's Consul General in Vancouver, said the quake has united Canada's Turkish community that may feel a sense of survivor's remorse being so far away from the disaster.

"I’m feeling that, honestly, personally,” he said. Tokmak said he was surprised to hear from the Burnaby USAR team, who called him early Monday morning last week with an offer of help, arranging a flight the next day. “They saved one lady. They saved one of our citizens," he said. "This makes us so much prouder.”

Tokmak said it's been a hectic time, adding the country must now focus on organizing relief efforts and future reconstruction plans.

“This year is the centennial of our republic. We were planning to normally do a lot of celebrations," he said. “Now, all of a sudden of course, everything changed.”

MORE National ARTICLES

Federal health offer is $196 billion over a decade

Federal health offer is $196 billion over a decade
There will also be an immediate one-time $2 billion top-up to this year's Canada Health Transfer to help provinces ease the intense pressure on emergency rooms and children's hospitals. Provinces can also get $1.7 billion over five years to increase wages for personal support workers in long-term care and home care.

Federal health offer is $196 billion over a decade

COVID critic died of drug toxicity: B.C. coroner

COVID critic died of drug toxicity: B.C. coroner
The report says Mak Parhar was found by a family member unresponsive in the bathroom of his New Westminster home on Nov. 4, 2021. The coroner's report says Parhar had ethanol, cocaine and fentanyl in his system at the time of death, ruling it accidental due to "mixed illicit drug toxicity."

COVID critic died of drug toxicity: B.C. coroner

West Fraser Timber to curtail Quesnel, B.C., mill

West Fraser Timber to curtail Quesnel, B.C., mill
West Fraser says the downtime at the Cariboo mill will help the company align its production capacity, though its plans may change if the fibre forecasts do. The company says the mill expects to mitigate some of the impact on employees through vacation scheduling and alternative work assignments.

West Fraser Timber to curtail Quesnel, B.C., mill

Climate change pushes B.C. urchins to shallows

Climate change pushes B.C. urchins to shallows
The study's co-author, Rylan Command, said heat domes and heat waves are becoming more common, and understanding how the ocean responds to those changes can have a direct impact on people.

Climate change pushes B.C. urchins to shallows

One-third of Canadians financially worse off: poll

One-third of Canadians financially worse off: poll
According to a Leger poll commissioned by the Association for Canadian Studies, 34 per cent of Canadian households say they're financially worse off compared with a year ago. The majority of respondents, 58 per cent, said their financial situation was about the same as it was a year ago.    

One-third of Canadians financially worse off: poll

Trudeau to present new health offer to premiers

Trudeau to present new health offer to premiers
The provinces budgeted about $204 billion for health care in this fiscal year and the Canada Health Transfer was set at $45 billion, or about 22 per cent of that. The premiers want the federal share to increase to 35 per cent.

Trudeau to present new health offer to premiers