AG百家乐在线官网

Eyewitness

Syrian man who took refuge in Turkey searches for his lost loved ones after earthquake

Mohamed Kenno fled to Turkey a decade ago with his family, but now he is searching for his loved ones under the rubble of their destroyed street in the city of Kahramanmaras.

Image: The long boulevard in Kahramanmaras is now bordered by piles of debris on either side
Why you can trust Sky News

When the Kenno family left Azaz, Syria a decade ago, fleeing the country's civil war, they chose to seek refuge in Kahramanmaras. A picturesque city sprawled along the Binboga mountain range.

Many of them settled along Azerbaycan boulevard and raised their families in the historic Turkish community. They learnt the language, sent their children to school and called the town their home.

Then the earthquakes hit and ripped through their family.

Since the disaster struck, Mohamed Kenno has been steadfastly searching for his aunts, uncles and cousins.

The 27-year-old studied business management at the University of Gaziantep, just a little over an hour away.

Turkey earthquake latest: Fears grow that infection will kill survivors as number of dead nears 36,000

Image: Mohamed's family members are pulled out of the wreckage

Gaziantep is closer to the 7.8 magnitude earthquake's epicentre but many of its new, proofed buildings withstood the pressure.

The road where his extended family lived in Kahramanmaras, slightly further from the epicentre, did not. The long boulevard is now bordered by piles of debris on either side.

Mohamed has been guarding the wreckage and pulling out his loved ones - dead or alive.

Image: Mohamed hasn't given up on finding his loved ones

Five households in the Kenno family were destroyed by the earthquake. 18 of them survived and 11 were killed.

The names of those they lost are to be remembered:

Fadil Subhi Kenno

Salih Fadil Subhi Kenno

Subhi Fadil Kenno

Fadil Subhi Fadil Kenno

Ghani Subhi Fadil Kenno

Fadil bin Abdel Hameed Fadi Kenno

Ayat Fadil Subhi Kenno

Fadeela bint Salah Fadil Subhi Kenno

Tasneem bint Abdel Hameed Fadil Kenno

Sham bint Abdel Hameed Fadil Kenno

Fadeela bint Abdel Hameed Fadil Kenno.

We witnessed when two of his cousins, Tasneem and Sham, were retrieved. Tasneem, 10, was found dead and the youngest Sham, eight, was astonishingly found alive after five full days. She was taken to the hospital but died from her injuries hours later. A glimmering moment of survival followed by the harsh reality of heartache.

Image: Sham Abdel Hameed Kenno was rescued but later died in hospital
Image: Tasneem Abdel Hameed Kenno was found dead

The third sister Fadeela, 14, and cousin Ainoor, three, are still buried under the rubble and though they are likely dead, Mohamed refuses to leave their bodies to rot.

Image: Fadeela Abdel Hameed Kenno is still buried under the rubble

He is still guiding the search for them and only leaves the site to pray at the mosque, update their surviving parents and make trips to the Kilis border to transfer the bodies to be laid to rest in Azaz.

"We honour the dead with a proper burial. We return to Syria, our land, our country, to lie with our relatives," says Mohamed, holding a tub of Vicks VapoRub he uses to help with the smell of decomposing bodies filling the air.

Read more:
Final funerals held for 24 Turkish Cypriot children killed while on school volleyball trip
Miracles are few and far between as search for life becomes bid to honour the dead
Survivors urgently need faster aid to 'save lives' - as WHO says disaster 'overwhelmed everyone'

Despite his family's unfathomable loss, Mohamed's faith is unwavering. He strongly believes that the delayed response in their communities and inaction in his home region of northwest Syria is a continuation of the neglect his people experienced throughout the war.

"The international community only intervenes based on their own interest. Their actions have destroyed our country," he says.

Image: Rescuers work through the night to pull people from the rubble

In the same breath, Mohamed refuses to allocate blame for the tragedy of this natural disaster. Unlike the war, he sees it as an act of God and one that he cannot resist.

"We escaped death and came to it - and that is God's will," he says, raising his hands resignedly.

In one Syrian family, we intimately witnessed the depth of this devastation.

Eleven members lost and four of them children.

In one Syrian man, we witnessed the patience, perseverance and care that is needed to power through.