Morocco earthquake: Villagers' hopes waning in search for survivors
- Published
Rescuers in Morocco have been using their bare hands as desperate search efforts continue for survivors of Friday's powerful earthquake.
A total of 2,681 people are known to have died in the tremor - the country's deadliest in 60 years.
Morocco's government is under pressure to accept more international aid, as rescuers battle with exhaustion.
So far, it has accepted help from only four countries - Spain, the UK, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates.
Officials defended the response, and said it would be too chaotic if teams from around the world suddenly arrived in Morocco.
The 6.8 magnitude tremor hit the High Atlas mountains south of Marrakesh, and destroyed many rural and remote villages.
One of them - Tafeghaghte - has had its population of 200 people nearly halved, and many are still missing.
Heavy lifting equipment is struggling to get through roads blocked by boulders and other debris.
Helicopters have been making round trips to deliver aid to mountainous regions.
Albert Vasquez, a communications officer for a team of 30 Spanish firefighters, told the AFP news agency that "it's very difficult to find people alive after three days" but "hope is still there".
In the village of Moulay Brahim, 26-year-old Said told the BBC that he saw his neighbour's house collapse.
"A family of six people lived there. The father was outside at the time and is still alive, but his wife and four children were there and died," he said, in a state of shock.
"The daughters were 15, eight and five years old. The last child was a little boy about to turn three," he explained.
Said has not been able to sleep or eat since Friday night.
"The situation is catastrophic. I don't know how I will recover from this," he said.
Tom Godfrey, the team lead for UK rescue charity EMT, said the worst impact was in the south-west, where humanitarian relief was desperately needed.
Speaking to the BBC en route the village of Amizmiz, he said his team were expecting to treat traumatic injuries initially, with the risk of disease increasing if aid was further delayed.
The World Health Organization said more than 300,000 people had been affected by the earthquake, the deadliest in Morocco since a 1960 earthquake destroyed Agadir, killing 12,000 to 15,000 people.
The Tinmel Mosque, a historic site in the mountains, has been severely damaged, and Marrakesh's old city, a World Heritage Site has suffered collapsed buildings.
Calls for more international aid grow louder
Pressure - and anger - is mounting on Morocco's government to accept the help offered by several nations.
The United States, Tunisia, Turkey, Taiwan and France - a former colonial power of Morocco - are some of the nations which have offered support.
Neighbouring Algeria, which has a long history of fraught relations with Morocco, has offered specialised rescue workers, medical personnel and sniffer dogs, as well as beds, tents and blankets.
But the Moroccan government has said it does not want to risk a chaotic situation with dozens of countries and aid organisations arriving to help.
"A lack of co-ordination in such cases would be counterproductive," authorities said.
Dr Clare McCaughey, a GP based in Marrakesh, told the BBC that private clinics like hers would not hesitate to "provide care to any earthquake victims free of charge".
"Moroccans are doing what Moroccans do best," she said, adding that it has been "incredible" to see the outpouring of support from the 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."
Related topics
- Published10 September 2023
- Published10 September 2023
- Published11 September 2023