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Earthquakes in Syria and Turkiye

This press release was last updated on February 10, 2023.

UNFPA is providing support to women and girls impacted by the devastating earthquakes that struck Syria and Turkiye, including by operating mobile clinics, creating safe spaces, and handing out winter dignity kits. UNFPA Syria

A pair of catastrophic earthquakes struck Syria and Turkiye on 6 February, killing thousands of people and injuring many more, with the numbers expected to rise as rescuers scramble to pull survivors from the rubble in freezing conditions. Some 15 million people live in the 10 provinces affected by the earthquakes, including an estimated 1.5 million refugees. Among the millions of people who have been affected are 214,000 pregnant women who need access to maternal health services.

“UNFPA is committed to support the people of Syria and Turkiye affected by the earthquakes, including the pregnant women who are expected to give birth in the coming weeks under these difficult conditions,” said Dr. Natalia Kanem, the Executive Director of UNFPA. “Their ability to access quality care before, during and after delivery must not be an afterthought.”

A Syrian woman walks past a half collapsed house on February 7, 2023, following a deadly earthquake. (Photo by BAKR ALKASEM/AFP via Getty Images)

The initial 7.7 magnitude earthquake struck in the early hours of the morning while people slept, with the second 7.6 magnitude quake hitting later in the day amid a series of aftershocks, compounding the devastation. The governments of both Syria and Turkiye have declared national emergencies and called for international support.

We have operations in the affected areas and were immediately on the ground assessing the need and preparing to support the emergency response in coordination with authorities and partners. Thousands of buildings, including UNFPA-supported safe spaces for women and girls, were severely damaged or destroyed. Our greatest priority is to restore services that are crucial to the health and well-being of women and girls.

We have begun providing reproductive health services to survivors in Turkiye, in addition to distributing dignity kits that contain essential personal care items, like soap, a toothbrush, and menstrual products.

In Syria, survivors are receiving blankets and warm clothes as part of our winter dignity kits. Mobile health teams and field clinics have been deployed to provide reproductive health and protection services in the worst-hit areas.

“The lives of so many people have been torn apart,” said Dr. Kanem. “Amidst the devastation and uncertainty that natural disasters bring, UNFPA will continue to do what is needed and what it does best: respond to women’s and girls’ emergency healthcare and protection needs.”

You can deliver critical sexual and reproductive health care to women and girls in Syria, Turkiye, and wherever care is needed most. Donate today.

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