eastern Turkey
climbed to 29 on Saturday night as rescue crews searched for people who
remained trapped under the rubble of collapsed buildings, officials
said.
Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu said at a news conference earlier in the day that 18 people had been killed in Elazig province, where Friday night's quake was centered, and four in neighboring Malatya. The national disaster agency later updated the total with seven more casualties.
Health Minister Fahrettin Koca said 1,243 people had been injured, with 34 of them in intensive care but not in critical condition.
On Saturday afternoon, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan visited the hardest-hit areas and attended the funeral of a mother and son killed in the quake. He warned people against repeating ``negative'' hearsay about the country being unprepared for earthquakes.
``Do
not listen to rumors, do not listen to anyone's negative, contrary
propaganda, and know that we are your servants,'' Erdogan said.
Various
earthquake monitoring centers gave magnitudes ranging from 6.5 to 6.8.
for the earthquake, which hit Friday at 8:55 p.m. local time (1755 GMT)
near the Elazig province town of Sivrice, the Turkish Disaster and
Emergency Management Presidency (AFAD) said.
It was followed by 398 aftershocks, the strongest of them with magnitudes 5.4 and 5.1, the disaster agency said.
Emergency
workers and security forces distributed tents, beds and blankets as
overnight temperatures dropped below freezing in the affected areas.
Mosques, schools, sports halls and student dormitories were opened for
hundreds who left their homes after the quake.
``The
earthquake was very severe. We desperately ran out [of our home],''
Emre Gocer told the state-run Anadolu news agency as he sheltered with
his family at a sports hall in Sivrice. ``We don't have a safe place to
stay right now.''
While visiting Sivrice and the city of Elazig, the provincial capital 565 kilometers (350 miles) east of Ankara, Erdogan promised state support for those affected by the disaster.
``We will not leave anyone in the open,'' the Turkish leader said.
Earlier,
a prosecutor in Ankara announced an investigation into ``provocative''
social media posts. Anadolu reported that Turkey's broadcasting
authority was also reviewing media coverage of the quake.
At least five buildings in Sivrice and 25 in Malatya province were destroyed in the disaster, Environment and Urbanization Minister Murat Kurum said. Hundreds of other structures were damaged and made unsafe.
AFAD reported that 42 people had been rescued as search teams combed wrecked apartment buildings.
Television
footage showed emergency workers removing a woman from the wreckage of a
collapsed building 19 hours after the main earthquake struck.
A
prison in Adiyaman, 110 kilometers (70 miles) southwest of the
epicenter, was evacuated because of damage, and its more than 800
prisoners were transferred to nearby jails.
AFAD said
28 rescue teams had been working around the clock. More than 2,600
personnel from 39 of Turkey's 81 provinces were sent to the disaster
site. Unmanned drones were used to survey damaged neighborhoods and
coordinate rescue efforts.
``Our biggest hope is that the death toll does not rise,'' Parliament Speaker Mustafa Sentop said.
Communication companies announced free telephone and internet services for residents in the quake-hit region.
Neighboring
Greece, which is at odds with Turkey over maritime boundaries and gas
exploration rights, offered to send rescue crews to assist the Turkish
teams.
Erdogan
appeared to reject the offer of outside assistance during his visit to
the city of Elazig, telling reporters, ``Our state does not need
anything.''
Turkey
sits on top of two major fault lines, and earthquakes are frequent. Two
strong earthquakes struck northwest Turkey in 1999, killing around
18,000 people.
A magnitude 6.0 earthquake killed 51 people in Elazig in 2010.
VOA