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Turkey issues 113 building arrest warrants after earthquake

Turkey issues 113 building arrest warrants after earthquake


Officials in Turkey have issued 113 arrest warrants in connection with the construction of buildings that collapsed in Monday’s earthquake.

Turkish police have taken at least 12 people into custody since Monday, inclduing building contractors, as the death toll from the earthquake that hit Turkey and Syria reaches over 28,000, with another 80,000-plus injured.

More arrests are expected as focus turns to who is to blame for the tragedy.

Thousands of buildings collapsed during the earthquake, and questions have been raised about whether the natural disaster’s impact was made worse by human failings.

Experts had previously warned that many new buildings in Turkey were unsafe due to government corruption.

Experts had previously warned that many new buildings in Turkey were unsafe

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Before the eartquake, amnesties for contractors who swerved building regulations were put in place in order to encourage a construction boom – including in earthquake-prone regions.

Turkey’s justice minister has vowed to punish anyone responsible and has established the “Earthquake Crimes Investigation” bureau.

The Independent is appealing for help in raising urgently needed funds following the deadliest earthquake to hit Turkey and Syria in almost a century.

Prosecutors have also begun gathering samples of buildings for evidence on materials used in constructions.

Authorities arrested two people in the province of Gaziantep today who are suspected to have cut down columns to make space in a building that collapsed.

A contractor of a luxury 12-story building in Antakya which collapsed was also detained in Istanbul while trying to board a flight to leave the country.

President Erdogan has addressed mounting frustration at the slow effort to rescue the thousands of people still missing during a visit to a disaster zone, but appeared to blame fate., saying:“such things have always happened. It’s part of destiny’s plan.”

Up to 5.3 million Syrians in the country’s northwest may have been left homeless by the earthquakes, according to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.

The UN has warned that more than 800,000 people are without adequate meals and has warned that the death toll could double.

The World Food Programme (WFP) warned on Friday that it is running out of food stocks in…

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