Fri. Nov 22nd, 2024
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Using shovels, hammers and even their bare hands to dig through rubble to reach survivors, a group of volunteers has been spearheading earthquake rescue efforts in Syria’s rebel-held north-west.

“We don’t have the cameras or heat sensors to locate the injured,” Ismail al Abdullah told the ABC.

“We don’t have much advanced equipment.”  

Mr Abdullah is the head of the media centre in Sarmada, Idlib, for the Syria Civil Defence volunteer rescue group — more commonly known as the White Helmets.

The group, which was established in 2014, is known for its daring rescues in areas hit by bombing by government and Russian forces in Syria’s 12-year civil war.

However, Mr Abdullah said, volunteers had never witnessed the scale of destruction left by the magnitude-7.8 earthquake that struck in Türkiye, near the Syrian border, on February 6.    

Nor did they have the equipment needed to respond to such a disaster.

Woman volunteers in white helmets walk at the site of a damaged building.
At the scene of a rescue operation, the first thing White Helmet volunteers do is listen for voices.(Reuters: Khalil Ashawi)

What they did have was “great experience” in how to immediately respond, which they have learned from more than a decade of rescuing civilians after aerial bombardments, Mr Abdullah said

“This made all the difference. We weren’t somehow lost in the beginning, we knew what we should do and we immediately responded,” he said.

“That’s why we saved a big number of people.”

Its volunteers — who range from bakers, to pharmacists and engineers — have managed to save more than 2,000 people often just using “primitive tools”.

‘Step-by-step’ rescues 

Mr Abdullah said an immediate rescue response starts with rescuers listening out for voices. 

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