No more rescues in Turkey..? What is the reason?

More than a week after the earthquake struck turkey, more people are still being rescued from the rubble. Nine people were rescued on Tuesday. Turkey-Syria earthquake death toll passes 41,000. Images of the turkey earthquake circulating online show the extent of the devastation in both countries. The death toll from last week's earthquakes in turkey and syria surpassed 41,000. Earthquake victims suffer from depression. Currently, people are struggling to survive in severe frost. Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan admitted that rescue operations had initially struggled after Turkey's earthquake struck and was overwhelmed by what to do right away. Speaking on television in Ankara, Erdogan said that they are facing one of the biggest natural disasters not only in their country but in the history of mankind.
More than 200 hours of the rescue of people trapped in the rubble.
The stories and plight of those rescued from the rubble of Tuesday's 7.8-magnitude turkey earthquake are sobering. However, the news that those who were trapped in the rubble for more than 200 hours have been rescued is comforting. Rescuers hope to find more survivors. However, it is said that it is necessary to focus on providing food, shelter, schooling, medicine, and other facilities to the survivors rather than on rescue operations.
Affected by mental health problems:

In Turkish hospitals, people no longer come only with physical injuries. indian army Major Beena Tiwari said the earthquake has left people traumatized and they are suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder "following all the trauma they went through during the earthquake". The psychological impact of the february 6 earthquake in turkey and syria was enormous. Families in both turkey and syria said they and their children were dealing with the psychological effects of the earthquake.

Indian army Major Beena Tiwari says her 9-year-old boy in Aleppo, syria, wakes up at night shaking.
Earthquake damage in Syria:

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has agreed to allow UN aid into syria through two more border crossings from Turkey. UN aid entered rebel-held northwestern syria through the newly opened Bab al-Salam border crossing on Tuesday. The decision marks a change for Damascus, which has long resisted cross-border aid deliveries to the rebel-held territory but has also received some small consolation from the effects of the earthquake. An earthquake in syria has affected nearly nine million people, the United Nations said, as a search for survivors in northwestern syria is winding down.

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