Social consequences of the recent earthquakes in Turkey
Recommendation 1448
(2000)
- Author(s):
- Parliamentary Assembly
- Origin
- Assembly debate on 27 January 2000 (8th Sitting) (see Doc. 8638, report of the Social, Health and Family Affairs Committee rapporteur: Mr Surján). Text adopted by the Assembly on 27 January2000 (8th Sitting).
- Thesaurus
1. The Assembly points out that the recent
earthquakes in Turkey occurred in one of the country's most densely populated,
heavily industrialised and prosperous regions. Loss of life was considerable,
many people are now invalids or unemployed, and the local economy has been
destroyed. Some not only lost family members, but everything they had:
possessions, home, job, a reason for living. They now live in fear and
helplessness.
2. Even today, despite the efforts and solidarity at national and
international community level, many families among the most deprived are still
living in great hardship in tents or prefabricated buildings, totally dependent
on social welfare in a region in which the winters are particularly severe. In
addition to housing, many schools, universities, hospitals and other facilities
have been destroyed or damaged and rendered unusable.
3. The Assembly welcomes the international community's positive reaction and
the national and international solidarity which has taken the form of financial
assistance; but it notes that the financial resources needed for reconstruction
greatly exceed Turkey's means, given the country’s high debt level. Aid for
reconstruction must therefore be given generously, and it is imperative that it
continue and increase. But it must also be co-ordinated in order to optimise
effectiveness, and reconstruction should be carried out with the agreement of
and in consultation with the local authorities and other bodies directly
involved.
4. The Assembly also notes that the consequences of the earthquakes for the
population and their social implications pose great problems for the Turkish
welfare services, and it calls for greater European co-operation on appropriate
health care and welfare policies.
5. It welcomes the action of the Turkish governmental and municipal
authorities after the earthquakes and especially the invaluable services
rendered by Turkish non-governmental organisations, which must have the
necessary funding and the Council of Europe's support if they are to continue
to play their role. Apart from NGOs and the international community, ordinary
citizens can be of enormous help to Turkey by visiting that country during the
tourist season. The main tourist sites are at a considerable distance from the
earthquake zone and the income from this tourism would be of immense help to
the victims of the earthquakes.
6. The Assembly therefore recommends that the Committee of Ministers invite
the member states to:
6.1 ensure, whether
bilaterally or in any other appropriate framework, more active partnership
between municipalities in member states and Turkey, giving priority to
rebuilding the schools destroyed or damaged by the earthquakes;
6.2 continue financial assistance to Turkey both in the form of gifts and
loans, in particular through the Council of Europe's Development Bank, so that
families can be rehoused and basic educational and health care services
restored to optimal functioning as rapidly as possible as a matter of
priority;
6.3 develop intergovernmental programmes of
activities in the social field in co-operation with other international
organisations such as Unicef and ILO in order more particularly to:
a provide psychosocial support for the victims
of the earthquakes, in particular children, and
b rehabilitate workers incapacitated by earthquake injury;
6.4 help further develop civil society in
Turkey and support the NGOs engaged in dealing with the consequences of the
earthquakes;
6.5 offer Turkey the requisite expertise to
develop effective decentralised government - preparations for which are
currently being made - so as to give local and regional authorities real
decision-making and administrative powers.
7. Lastly, since further earthquakes could strike not only in Turkey but in
other parts of Europe, the Assembly urges the Committee of Ministers to learn
the lessons of the recent earthquakes in the region, in particular:
7.1 by subjecting existing Council of Europe
documents on disaster relief to critical scrutiny in order to produce, if need
be, an updated European crisis management model for dealing with natural
disasters or catastrophes, and
7.2 by asking member states to
see to it that they have earthquake norms for the building sector and that
these are fully enforced.