2455
0
Loading version...
🔄 Update App
🔍 Check for Updates
Test Notification
🔔 Enable Notifications
📰 Fetch NHK News
🚀 Fetch TechCrunch News
🧪 Experiment
📰 Article Management
📚 Reading List
🎤 Speaking List
📊 Statistics
💻 Software Statistics
Push Admin
Edit Reading
Back to List
Basic Information
Title
Please enter a title.
URL
Please enter a valid URL.
Date
カテゴリID
画像ファイル名
統計情報
単語数:
225語
読了回数:
0回
作成日:
2023/02/10 11:46
更新日:
2025/12/09 07:37
本文
本文
Aid workers are struggling to get around damaged roads, rubble and other logistical challenges to help survivors of two earthquakes in southern Turkey near the border with Syria. The quakes struck on Monday, killing at least 20,000 people. More than 72 hours have passed since the quakes, which is said to cause a sharp drop in survival rates. But rescue teams in the two countries are still scrambling to find survivors in the rubble. UN officials say the disaster has affected at least ten million people in Syria alone. "Whatever we can do, we have to do it together, driven by the humanitarian needs," said El-Mostafa Benlamlih, UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator for Syria. "And we just hope that the political considerations and so on will get out of the way and let us do our work." More than a decade of civil war means millions of people in northwest Syria depended on aid from across the border even before the earthquake. Those who had fled to Turkey now face an uncertain future. "We have no hope," said a Syrian man. "We lost everything when we fled Syria. And now we've lost it all again. No home and no jobs." Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan called the earthquakes the "disaster of the century" and urged people to be patient with the progress of rescue efforts.
本文を入力してください。
メモ
メモ・感想
キャンセル
更新
Debug Info:
Saved State:
-
Redirected Flag:
-
Current URL:
-
Refresh
Close
Debug
Send Report
Send Report
Draw Arrow
Clear
Message:
Cancel
Send