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Villagers’ hopes waning in search for Morocco quake survivors

From BBC

With reporting in Morocco from Tom Bateman, Alice Cuddy, Carine Torbey, Noura Majdoub, Nick Beake and James Copnall

Edited by Andrew Humphrey

Summary

  1. The number of people killed in Friday’s powerful earthquake in Morocco has risen to 2,681, the interior ministry says
  2. Rescuers have been using their bare hands to dig for survivors
  3. Heavy lifting equipment can’t get through roads blocked by boulders to reach remote villages near the epicentre in the Atlas Mountains
  4. Many lie in ruins with local people desperately awaiting aid
  5. The Moroccan government says it has accepted aid from four countries so far – Britain, Spain, Qatar and the UAE
  6. Friday’s earthquake, the country’s deadliest in 60 years, struck below villages in the High Atlas mountains south of Marrakesh
  7. BBC reporter Nick Beake reached the village of Tafeghaghte, where 90 of the 200 residents were confirmed dead, and many others missing
Reuters: Rescuers have warned that it will be difficult to find survivors after three days

We’re finishing our live coverage of the ongoing impact of the earthquake in Morocco. Thanks for joining us.

If you’d like to stay updated with the main developments, the main news story is available here.

Families have been sharing some harrowing stories about the loved ones they have lost with our reporter Alice Cuddy. You can read her piece here.

The page today has been brought to you by our reporters in Morocco: Tom Bateman, Alice Cuddy, Carine Torbey, Noura Majdoub, Nick Beake and James Copnall.

Our team in the UK was by James FitzGerlad, Adam Durbin, Laurence Peter Heather Sharpe, Gem O’Reilly, Jacqueline Howard, James Gregory, Tarik Habte, Fiona Nimoni and me.

1:46

What we know so far

It’s been three days since the 6.8 magnitude earthquake struck Morocco. Here’s what we know so far: 

  • At least 2,681 people have died after the powerful earthquake struck central Morocco on Friday night, the country’s Interior Ministry says
  • Many of the deaths are said to be in hard-to-reach mountain areas
  • The Moroccan government has accepted aid from four countries so far – Britain, Spain, Qatar and the UAE
  • Rescuers have been using their bare hands to dig for survivors because heavy lifting equipment can’t get through roads blocked by boulders to reach remote villages
  • With a magnitude of 6.8, the earthquake is the biggest to hit central Morocco since before 1900

11:29

‘Debris everywhere’: Tourists shaken in Marrakesh

EPA – Damaged buildings in Marrakesh

British tourists in Marrakesh have been telling the BBC about the moment the quake struck and the aftermath.

Samantha and her daughter Jessica are staying in a riad – a traditional Moroccan house.

“Our riad has survived but the roofs of the buildings around us have all crumbled and the house next door has collapsed,” Samantha said.

“There is an enormous amount of building debris everywhere and lots of the alleyways are blocked.”

She said tourists wanted to get home safely but “flight prices are rising exorbitantly by the hour”.

Caitlin and Jamie Faulkner were at a party when the quake struck. Caitlin said “we thought they’d turned the music back on. It sounded like bass but with no music”. Then the power went out.

At 1.30am they were able to return to their hotel. “When we woke up, every sun lounger was filled with pillows and duvets. A lot of people slept outside,” Caitlin said.

Clara Bennett, a student, said “I was just brushing my teeth and the whole floor shook. There was a roar. It was terrifying”.

Luckily, the riad where she was staying with her parents and brother was not damaged. But neighbouring buildings had collapsed.

“There was a great sense of community, people carrying disabled people, handing out water and food,” she said.

  1. 11:13Rescuers search for mother and daughterAlice CuddyReporting from the quake-hit village of OuriganeRescue workers search for Fatima and her daughterBBCCopyright: BBCThere are formal rescue teams with heavy machinery and a sniffer dog leading the search for Fatima and her daughter.It’s slow work and a small crowd including neighbours and journalists gathered to watch, but were moved back by authorities.We’ve been talking to Fatima’s neighbour, Said.He says it will be “very difficult” to find her, saying she lived on the ground floor of a three-storey building. But he is waiting here along with other neighbours in hope.“She’s a very good woman, a very good neighbour. Always helping.”A military helicopter has just flown overhead and into the mountains.Many of the communities worst affected by this disaster live deep in the mountains, and inaccessible roads mean that air support is the only way that crucial aid is able to reach them.A picture of Said, Fatima's neighbourBBCCopyright: BBCSaid is Fatima’s neighbourImage caption: Said is Fatima’s neighbourArticle share tools
  2. Posted at 10:5710:57Death toll rises to 2,681 – state TVThe death toll from Friday’s earthquake has risen to 2,681 and the number of people injured currently stands at 2,501, according to state TV in Morocco Article share tools
  3. Posted at 10:5110:51Spanish rescue team say “hope is still there”The United Firefighters Without Borders, prepares the expedition to travel to Morocco on a mission to find people under rubble with dogs, on September 9, 2023 in Huelva (Andalusia, Spain).Europa Press via GettyCopyright: Europa Press via GettyFirefighters in Spain preparing to join rescue efforts in MoroccoImage caption: Firefighters in Spain preparing to join rescue efforts in MoroccoA rescue team from Spain’s Military Emergencies Unit (UME) has arrived in Morocco with a canine unit and microcameras, in the hope that more survivors can be found in the rubble.Albert Vasquez, the unit’s communications officer, warned that it would be “very difficult to find people alive after three days” but added, “hope is still there”.A Spanish team of firefighters and medical personnel have also been coordinating their rescue efforts in the devastated town of Talat N’Yaaqoub, which is situated in the remote Atlas Mountains, making it much harder to rescue people quickly.Head of the Spanish team, Annika Coll, explains; “The big difficulty is in zones remote and difficult to access, like here, but the injured are choppered out.”Spain is one of only four countries that Morocco has currently accepted aid from.Article share tools
  4. Posted at 10:3510:35Authorities accept only limited international helpSearch and rescue personnel and vehicles inside planeReutersCopyright: ReutersQatar sent search and rescue personnel on a military cargo planeImage caption: Qatar sent search and rescue personnel on a military cargo planeAlmost as soon as news broke of Friday’s earthquake in Morocco, offers of help from around the world came in.But the country has so far been selective, accepting support from just Spain, Qatar, the UK and the United Arab Emirates, and there have been questions over why Morocco has been slow to accept other offers.French help is on standby but the head of one rescue charity, Secouristes sans Frontieres, said his aid workers had not been given the go-ahead from the Moroccan government, the AFP news agency reports.Algeria, which cut diplomatic ties with its North African neighbour two years ago, said it could send 80 specialised rescue workers from its civil protection force.There have also been offers from the US, Tunisia, Turkey and Taiwan among others.But the decision over what assistance to welcome has got caught up in questions of sovereignty and geopolitics.Morocco says it wants to maintain control and “a lack of co-ordination… would be counterproductive”.But government critic and activist Maati Mounjib has said it is the wrong response and it is “really an errror [to insist on] to insist on sovereignty and national pride.””This is not the moment to refuse because the aid is essential,” he told the BBC’s Newsday.You can read more about who has said what and the underlying issues here.Article share tools
  5. Posted at 10:2310:23’Massive destruction’ in the Atlas MountainsAlice CuddyReporting from the quake-hit village of OuriganeHere are some of the images of what we’re seeing right now in Ourigane.The entry of a house surrounded by rubbleBBCCopyright: BBCEntire houses have been destroyedImage caption: Entire houses have been destroyedA house entry destroyed by the quakeBBCCopyright: BBCMany buildings in the village are now just rubbleImage caption: Many buildings in the village are now just rubbleA house destroyedBBCCopyright: BBCRescue teams say they are trying to help as much as they can in remote areasImage caption: Rescue teams say they are trying to help as much as they can in remote areasA boot in rubbleBBCCopyright: BBCBut for many, hopes of finding survivors are fadingImage caption: But for many, hopes of finding survivors are fadingArticle share tools
  6. Posted at 10:1210:12Historic mosque damaged in the quakeA crumbling building roped offReutersCopyright: ReutersOne of the most important historical sites in the High Atlas mountains has been severely damaged in the earthquake.The Tinmel Mosque, an earth-and-stone mosque built by the Almohad dynasty, medieval rulers that conquered North Africa and Spain, now stands with crumbled walls, a half-fallen tower and is littered with debris.A Moroccan Culture Ministry source told the Reuters news agency, “the ministry has decided to restore it and will make budget for it”, but did not provide further details.The mosque intact before the earthquake, with ridged detailing around the top of the wallsGetty ImagesCopyright: Getty ImagesBefore the earthquake the exterior walls of the Tinmel Mosque had ornate detailingImage caption: Before the earthquake the exterior walls of the Tinmel Mosque had ornate detailingArticle share tools
  7. Posted at 10:0110:01All of my colleagues have lost someone – hotel workerThe feelings of loss and devastation are shared throughout the communities that live and work in the Atlas Mountains, a local hotel employee tells the BBC.Mohcine Fala works at a hotel in a village called Marigha. One of his colleagues lost eight members of her family in the earthquake, including her seven-year-old son.”She’s there just in a little tent with the rest of her family waiting to find her son,” Fala says. “Totally, totally horrible feeling that someone of your family is just buried under the ground,” he adds.Fala says everyone is doing what they can do help out, and there is a shared sense of family throughout the community. He says all of his colleagues have lost someone.”All of them are my families,” he says, adding, “I’m sharing these same feelings”.Article share tools
  8. Posted at 9:509:50Hope waning in three-day search for mother and daughterAlice CuddyReporting from the quake-hit village of OuriganeIn Ourigane, desperate search efforts are underway to rescue a 40-year-old woman and her teenager daughter whose home collapsed in the earthquake.Relatives have gathered nearby, praying that Fatima and her daughter Hajar will be rescued.But when I ask how hopeful they are, all shake their heads, saying it has been three days now. Fatima’s husband and son were pulled from the rubble and taken to hospital, but died there.Four men standing amid rubbleBBCCopyright: BBCNeighours have been helping search for Fatima and her daughter HajarImage caption: Neighours have been helping search for Fatima and her daughter HajarDamaged houses in village of OuriganeBBCCopyright: BBCSome homes in Ourigane have been badly damagedImage caption: Some homes in Ourigane have been badly damagedArticle share tools
  9. Posted at 9:379:37Search for survivors in Talat N’YaaqoubA woman watches near the rubble of a buildingReutersCopyright: ReutersA woman watches near the rubble of a buildingImage caption: A woman watches near the rubble of a buildingRescue workers look for survivorsReutersCopyright: ReutersRescue workers search for survivorsImage caption: Rescue workers search for survivorsRescue workers carry away the body of an earthquake victimReutersCopyright: ReutersThe body of one earthquake victim is carried away by rescue workersImage caption: The body of one earthquake victim is carried away by rescue workersA boy carries an item of furniture in a hamlet on the outskirts of Talat N'YaaqoubReutersCopyright: ReutersA boy carries an item of furniture in a hamlet on the outskirts of Talat N’YaaqoubImage caption: A boy carries an item of furniture in a hamlet on the outskirts of Talat N’YaaqoubA woman carries a bottle as she walks past a building which has been destroyed by the earthquakeReutersCopyright: ReutersA woman carries a bottle as she walks past a building which has been destroyed by the earthquakeImage caption: A woman carries a bottle as she walks past a building which has been destroyed by the earthquakeArticle share tools
  10. Posted at 9:239:23’We’re expecting traumas of varying degrees’Gem O’ReillyLive reporterTom Godfrey and team medical lead David AndersonTom GodfreyCopyright: Tom GodfreyTom and his team landed this morning in MarrakeshImage caption: Tom and his team landed this morning in MarrakeshTom Godfrey is the team lead for UK-Med, a charity and rescue team. They have been invited by the Moroccan government to help in the country with the response to the earthquake.The team of four, whose trip is being funded by the UK’s Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office, landed this morning in Marrakesh and are currently on the road to Amizmiz.He said: “When we arrive there we are going to link up with the central rescue team and work with local health authorities.”We’re also in touch with the ministry of health and UN coordination to figure out how we can best facilitate and establish where the needs are greatest.”The team consists of Godfrey as lead, an emergency nurse, a water and sanitation specialist and a logistician.Godfrey also explained that there are more team members in the UK ready to be deployed, but they’re waiting for the green light from the Moroccan government.“We are the advance party trying to establish how we can help. Then if we get the go ahead, we will send over further people.”We don’t want to bring in additional capacity unless the Moroccan government needs it.”Tom described Marrakesh as “functioning fairly-well” and they didn’t go into the old town. But he said: “The worst impact is towards the southwest. In the villages the health situation is worst there.”We know that earthquakes can affect remote areas entirely differently.”Tom explained that the injuries they’re expecting are traumas of varying degrees but soft tissue injuries to begin with and potentially diseases in the longer term.He added: “We’re really glad to have the opportunity to help and bring added value. We’re feeling eager to get stuck in.”Article share tools
  11. Posted at 9:069:06’Moroccans are doing what Moroccans do best’Dr Clare McCaughey, a GP based in Marrakesh, has been speaking to BBC Radio 5 Live. She says private clinics like hers have “opened their doors” and will “provide care to any earthquake victims free of charge”.“Moroccans are doing what Moroccans do best,” she says.Dr McCaughey says her children have spent the weekend worrying about aftershocks and she is trying to reassure them that they are safe.“We’re trying to go on as normal but there is a lot of fear,” she says. “People are still sleeping on the streets because they don’t want to go back to their homes.” She tells the BBC it has been “incredible” to see the outpouring of support from the local community. “There are huge trucks going up to the mountains, but also people [taking their cars] to the supermarkets and getting them up the hill to the people,” she says.

For more on this story go to: BBC WORLD NEWS

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