Turkey earthquake: DEC appeal nets £50m in two days as death toll touches 25,000

The aid effort to rescue and support victims of the Turkey-Syria earthquake has raised more than £50 million in two days.

The death toll from the disaster, which happened in the early hours of Monday February 6, is now approaching 25,000, with thousands more left injured or homeless.

The Disasters Emergency Committee (DEC) which brings together 15 leading UK aid charities says its appeal has raised £52.8 million in two days - including £5 million in aid match from the UK Government.

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Freezing conditions, with temperatures dropping below zero overnight, are affecting those who have lost their homes, and tremors are still being felt in the area on Saturday morning.

Bulldozers work among the rubble of collapsed buildings in Adiyaman, Turkey three days after a 7,8-magnitude earthquake struck southeast Turkey (Photo by ILYAS AKENGIN/AFP via Getty Images)Bulldozers work among the rubble of collapsed buildings in Adiyaman, Turkey three days after a 7,8-magnitude earthquake struck southeast Turkey (Photo by ILYAS AKENGIN/AFP via Getty Images)
Bulldozers work among the rubble of collapsed buildings in Adiyaman, Turkey three days after a 7,8-magnitude earthquake struck southeast Turkey (Photo by ILYAS AKENGIN/AFP via Getty Images)

DEC chief executive Saleh Saeed said: "We're incredibly grateful to the British public for their hugely generous response to this horrific disaster.

"It's impossible not to see the images on TV and hear the stories coming from Turkey and Syria and not be moved.

"Compassion comes in many forms, but we are urging people to donate money rather than things.

"What people in Turkey and Syria need today may not be what they need tomorrow and giving cash means that DEC charities can get help to people quickly and provide a wide range of support over a longer period of time."

Work being carried out includes NGO Violet, an ActionAid partner charity, rescuing a young girl trapped in rubble in north-west Syria after being trapped for more than 36 hours.

The girl is said to have asked rescuers to go home before remembering her house had been destroyed.

In Turkey, CARE International has been distributing winter clothes, blankets, generators, food and drinking water. In Syria, it will be using DEC funding to distribute stocks of essential items including tents and blankets provided by the UK Government.

The International Rescue Committee is working with partners to support hospitals and other healthcare services as well as providing household items to the injured and homeless.