Despite being thousands of kilometres away, the effects of the horrific earthquake that devastated much of southeast Turkey and northeast Syria are being felt by large sections of Australia's Turkish community.
TASS/Sipa USA
As rescue workers responded in the affected city, Ms Coskun said she was devastated to learn that her mother was among the thousands trapped under rubble following the 7.8 magnitude quake.The first thing she did was book a flight home. "That family of five is no longer with us today," she said, while eagerly awaiting contact from her cousin Dr Sabahattin Aslan, who lives in Antakya.
The earthquake affected a wide region of Turkey, and a number of community members who migrated from the southwest region to Australia still hold personal links to the region. Members of Melbourne's Turkish community with a container full of donated relief supplies for Turkey's quake victims.
Australia Latest News, Australia Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
‘Everyone’s panicking’: Australia’s Turkish community fears for loved onesSydney’s Resul Bozoglu feels there isn’t much he can do for his extended family as they worry about aftershocks from the earthquake that hit southern Turkey.
Read more »
‘Prayers’ for former EPL star trapped under the rubble of Turkish earthquakeFormer EPL and Ghanaian FIFA World Cup star Christian Atsu is among thousands rescued from the rubble in devastating earthquakes that have killed at least 3000 people across Turkey and Syria. 7NEWS
Read more »
China could unlock ‘treasure trove’ of personal information from AustraliansSky News Political Reporter Jonathan Lea investigates how much information the Chinese government is gathering from people’s cars and personal devices as its global technological influence expands. China’s domination around smart devices has led a Washington-based consultancy to call on consumers to wake up and ban the components in supply chains. Mr Lea said China is no longer an “automotive minnow”, with some of the nation’s state-owned companies controlling more markets than ever before. “The Chinese Communist Party and its intelligence agencies have a philosophy of collect now and decrypt later,” Liberal Senator James Paterson told Sky News Australia. “They are hoping to develop quantum decryption technology, and if in the future they are successful doing that, that might unlock a treasure trove of years of gathered personal identifying information on Australians, on Americans, on Canadians and people all around the world.”
Read more »
Australians need ‘sensible’ financial policy not ‘handouts’ from the govtHerald Sun Business Commentator Terry McCrann says Australians need financial help from the federal government via “sensible policy” and not just “handouts”. “We do need some help coming from the federal government,” Mr McCrann told Sky News host Peta Credlin. “I personally don’t want to see handouts from the federal government; what I want to see from the federal government is sensible policy and ... the key areas that we need sensible policy are on energy and gas prices and electricity prices. “I can only state what we should be hitting, I can’t actually say it will be forthcoming from Canberra.”
Read more »
Slower rate rises will continue the financial ‘pain’ for AustraliansHerald Sun Business Commentator Terry McCrann says the Reserve Bank rate rises for mortgage holders are not “dramatically” impacting the economy and it will cause the “pain” of these rises to extend further for Australians. “We’ll almost certainly see another 25 points at the next meeting in March, when we talk about nine rate rises in a row, let’s not forget we started at almost zero,” Mr McCrann told Sky News host Peta Credlin. “We should never have gone all that way down to zero, but we did, and coming back from that is to get rates to somewhere half-sensible. “Only one in three people actually have a mortgage, two in three people don’t have a mortgage, half of those are renters, the other half are savers – it’s not working dramatically in terms of impacting on the economy and that really means the pain is going to be extended for longer and will go yet higher from this point.”
Read more »
Indigenous Voice in constitution ‘discriminates’ against all other AustraliansFormer Victorian premier Jeff Kennett says giving one group “special access” discriminates against all Australians, and having the Voice established through legislation “outside” of the constitution is a better way to do it. “The constitution must be for all Australians equally – to give one group special access, even if it’s only advice, discriminates against all other Australians,” Mr Kennett told Sky News host Paul Murray. “I’m in favour of the Voice being established, but I want it done by legislation, and it is by legislation outside of the constitution.”
Read more »