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JAPAN CRISIS

JAPAN

Embassy: no plans to evacuate Japan Swedes

Sweden has no plans in place to follow France and evacuate nationals from earthquake-hit Japan.

“We maintain that it is the recommendations of the Japanese authorities that should apply. No immediately life-threatening emergency has occurred recently but there is obviously a grave concern,” Kaj Reinius at the Swedish embassy in Tokyo said on Wednesday.

Reinius told the TT news agency that Swedes currently residing in Japan have been in contact with the embassy to inquire as to evacuation plans.

“We have close contacts with Swedish authorities, who are experts in this field and this is a joint assessment,” he said.

When asked whether the conditions for organising an evacuation require a immediately life-threatening situation, Reinius replied:

“Yes exactly. And we can see that we have not yet reached that situation, and are naturally hopeful that the situation never occurs.”

The embassy has received staff reinforcements and according to Reinius is working around the clock. Among other requests, there are several parents who are now applying for passports for their children.

Many Swedes, just like other residents of Tokyo, are starting to feel the pinch of grocery and electricity shortages.

“It is pretty empty in the supermarkets, there are shortages of water and the electricity is subject to rationing on a regular basis,” said Reinius.

Sweden’s foreign ministry on Tuesday extended its warning against all non-essential travel to Tokyo and the regions of Kanto and Tohoku in north eastern Japan.

Aftershocks from the March 11th earthquake are still being felt in the city and other areas of the country, with some measuring as high as 6.0 on the Richter scale.

Figures are starting emerge over the number of fatalities caused by the earthquake and resultant tsunami.

The official death toll amounted to 3,676 people on Wednesday morning, with a further 7,843 listed as officially missing. Japanese authorities however fear that the total number of deaths may well far exceed 10,000.

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EARTHQUAKES

Turkish community in Germany gathers to help earthquake victims

The earthquake in Turkey and northern Syria has shaken the whole of Germany - but especially those who have relatives in the disaster area. 

Turkish community in Germany gathers to help earthquake victims

In dozens of cities in Germany, donations are being collected for victims of the massive earthquake, which as of Wednesday afternoon had claimed more than 11,000 lives.

People are bringing tent stoves, flashlights, diapers, fleece blankets, and hand warmers. One of the many collection points has been organized by the German-Turkish care service Dosteli in Berlin.

At the governmental level, Germany — home to about three million people of Turkish origin — will” mobilise all the assistance we can activate”, Interior Minister Nancy Faeser said on Wednesday.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz had a call with Erdogan and sent his “deep condolences”, as a search and rescue team left Tuesday afternoon with 50 rescuers and equipment. 

​​The EU said it was “funding humanitarian organisations that are carrying out search and rescue operations” in Syria as well as providing water and sanitation support and distributing blankets.

Charities line up to help

Particularly in Berlin, where over eight percent of the population is of Turkish origin, people have lined up down streets to drop off supplies. But they have led large donation efforts in cities like Frankfurt and Hamburg, where several businesses like bars set aside space to collect supplies,

The Dostali team had been sorting clothes and hygiene items all night, packing them and loading them into trucks. “Almost the entire Turkish diaspora in Berlin was there,” one volunteer told the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (FAZ)

The helpers organized themselves via appeals in social media. From the collection points, the donations are to be transported by trucks and planes to the affected regions. 

READ ALSO: Who are Germany’s foreign population and where do they live?

In response to an inquiry from the FAZ, Turkish Airlines confirmed that it was delivering donations from 14 countries to the Turkish crisis areas, Germany being one of them.

The Turkish community in Germany is well connected via social media – “and everyone wants to help,” said Kübra Oguz, a volunteer with the Puduhepa e.V., initiative founded by Turkish migrant women.

In order for this to happen in a targeted manner, she recommended directly donating money, which could then be funneled to buy food, hygiene products or shoes, depending on the need.

Several organisations in Germany and worldwide are also accepting donations for humanitarian aid, include UNICEF, Save the Children and Aktion Deutschland Hilft.

With reporting from AFP.

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