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Women deal with added burdens of Turkey’s earthquake disaster

Turkey women earthquake

This photograph taken on February 19, 2023, shows women carrying buckets of water in Yaylakonak village in Adıyaman district, a Kurdish Alevi community village where 108 people died and 170 houses collapsed after a 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck parts of Turkey and Syria. BÜLENT KILIÇ / AFP

The shelves of the makeshift clinic — little more than an orange storage container — offer everything women are too shy to ask for on the streets of Turkey’s earthquake zone.

From underwear to period and contraception products, doctor Meltem Günbegi reconnects women with the basics they feel uncomfortable discussing in the crowds of mass aid distribution centers.

She also offers a receptive ear, helping the women of southern Turkey’s destroyed city of Antakya to start processing the grief and death they have been subjected to in the past month.

The toll from the 7.8-magnitude earthquake now stands at more than 46,000 in Turkey and at nearly 6,000 in Syria, making it one of the world’s 10 deadliest of the past 100 years.

A top United Nations official said on Tuesday that the damage alone amounted to more than $100 billion, with extra money needed for recovery costs.

“Many are shy when it comes to asking for basics, such as bras, wax bands and tweezers, so they come and visit our container,” said the 33-year-old doctor.

More women are having genital issues because of poor hygiene conditions in the tent cities set up across the 11 quake-hit provinces, Günbegi said.

But she also sees women who are clearly still in shock and too traumatized to start thinking about their own bodies — even when they are pregnant.

“They experienced a lot of death, a lot of destruction,” said the doctor. “They really don’t seem to think about the baby. They are in a state of trauma.”

‘Insecure’

Selver Büyükkeleş, an earthquake survivor who works with the Mor Çatı (Purple Roof) shelter foundation, said women bore the brunt of daily burdens — such as doing chores and taking care of family — even before the February 6 quake.

Now they are trying to do the same while dealing with personal pain and an acute sense of insecurity that comes with life out on the streets.

“Women line up to get food at distribution centers. They cook, they take care of the children and the elderly. They do the dishes. They do the laundry,” the 28-year-old said.

“Women feel responsible for their family’s situation. They fear a new earthquake and the communal life in tents makes them insecure,” she said.

At this stage, activists and doctors interviewed by AFP have not observed more cases of domestic violence or abuse, despite Turkey’s poor record on the issue.

Fidan Ataselim, secretary-general of the We Will Stop Femicide Platform, has called for “safe shelters” and “prevention centers” to be set up for women in damaged regions.

We Will Stop Femicide publicizes the murder and abuse of women in the mostly Muslim but officially secular country.

In 2022, at least 327 women were killed and 793 injured, according to data compiled by the platform.

‘Safe zone’

Back at Antakya’s Dostluk (Friendship) park, not far from Günbegi’s makeshift clinic, volunteers work in shifts making sure that some 200 women sheltering in dozens of tents are safe.

Others are keeping vigil outside toilets and shower cabins.

“Safe zone for women and LGBT+ here,” proclaim posters in Turkish and Arabic.

The Arabic is a nod to the millions of refugees and migrants who have been living across stretches of southern Turkey since the start of the civil war in neighboring Syria 12 years ago.

“We have a security system for both women and LGBT+, who are more vulnerable in such disasters,” said Aslıhan Keleş, 23, one of the volunteers in the park.

Turkish women often join marches on March 8 — the official International Women’s Day — demanding better lives and protection against domestic violence.

But this year, things are different in the quake zone, Keleş said.

“Here, there is an emergency,” she said. “This time, we are in the field — but for a very good cause.”

© Agence France-Presse

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