The earthquake that struck northwestern Syria and southeastern Turkey claimed thousands of lives, wiping out the dreams of hundreds of thousands, levelling the homes and tents of millions, and burying groans of pain and whispers for help under the silent rubble.
The tragedy in Turkey and Syria is immense, too big and too harsh to put into words. The suffering is one – save for one major difference if one were to look beyond the devastation in both countries.
This difference lies in the headline. In Turkey, the disaster has a headline, a reference point to pin blame and hopes on. In Syria, the suffering remained orphaned.
Since the moment the roofs caved in over their residents’ heads and buildings were reduced to rubble, there has been one headline in Ankara.
Talk of corruption, construction permit problems, and lax accountability, coupled with analyses of how the quake will affect the upcoming elections.
The political fate of the Justice and Development Party, which emerged with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan from the rubble of last century’s earthquake, may be tied to the rubble of this earthquake.
Much has been said and will be said before the next elections in May — if these are held on time.
However, leaders from the political, military, economic, and foreign sectors and civil society organisations did their best (some for the sake of their conflicting political agendas) to deal with the earthquake in all its humanitarian, political, economic, and international dimensions.
Suffering a common denominator
The scene was different in Syria. For context, the earthquake struck northwestern Syria, home to about four million people.
Some of these people had been displaced from rural Idlib and other parts of Syria, heading towards the borders with Turkey, which they deemed to be “safe.”
Some built houses there, and others lived in tents.
On the other side, there are also refugees who had left Syria altogether.
The common denominator between Syrians on both sides of the border is their suffering. Bad luck followed them everywhere they went, fleeing the dangers of war only to be killed by an earthquake in their sleep.