Posted: 2023-02-16 08:44:44

The Australian search-and-rescue team in Türkiye has recovered 14 bodies from the ruins left by the magnitude-7.8 earthquake that struck the country more than a week ago.

The team of 72 hand-picked rescue workers is based in the historic city of Antakya, the capital of the southern Hatay province, where they landed on Sunday. 

The city is one of the hardest hit by the earthquake and damage is much worse than first thought, says Fire and Rescue NSW, which supplied 52 firefighters to the team. 

The Disaster Assistant Response Team (DART) was announced in parliament by Prime Minister Anthony Albanese on February 8, two days after the earthquake devastated a wide swathe of Türkiye and neighbouring Syria. 

"These urban search-and-rescue [USAR] specialists are highly trained to locate, deliver medical assistance to, and remove victims who have been trapped or impacted by a structural collapse," Mr Albanese said.

"Our National Emergency Management Agency, or NEMA, is working closely with Fire and Rescue New South Wales, DFAT and the ADF to coordinate the deployment as soon as possible, with an aim to have people on the ground by the end of this week."

The team was in addition to an initial $10 million in aid, later increased to $18 million.

The Australians' accreditation with the UN International Search and Rescue Advisory Group means that four members of the team are coordinating the Hatay province mission, supporting all the other rescue teams.

China, Spain, France, Portugal, India, Argentina, Spain, Moldova, Ukraine and Romania all have rescuers in the region, working with, or under the coordination of, the Australians across 19 worksites in the Hatay province.

A Chinese K9 search team led Australian searchers to a collapsed building where the dogs picked up traces of two victims, FRNSW says.

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