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more on our website and we re on twitter and instagram too. see you in half an hour good morning, you re watching breakfast with naga munchetty and charlie stayt. our main story today is the continuing effort to find survivors and recover the dead from the rubble of the earthquakes in turkey and syria, which are now known to have killed 15,000 people. the quakes were the biggest in the region since 1939 and triggered dozens of aftershocks along the east anatolian fault line, which is one of the world s most active areas for seismic movement. the freezing conditions mean hopes of finding survivors are fading but teams of rescuers have continued searching the rubble through the night. this is the scene in the turkish city of gaziantep.
good morning. it s wednesday, the 8th of february. in the last few minutes of the death toll has increased to 8700 people now known to have been killed following the devastating earthquakes which hit turkey and syria. that death toll is likely to rise significantly as rescue workers and civilians continue to search the rubble, and survivors trapped beneath it succumb to bitterly cold weather. the earthquakes were the biggest in the region since 1939, and they triggered dozens of aftershocks along the east anatolian fault line, which is one of the world s most active areas for seismic movement. howard johnson has the latest details. the desperate search for survivors continued overnight, often in bitterly cold conditions. but with each hour that passes, the chance of finding more people alive diminishes. in worst hit hatay, turkey,
and survivors trapped beneath it succumb to bitterly cold weather. the earthquakes were the biggest in the region since 1939, and they triggered dozens of aftershocks along the east anatolian fault line, which is one of the world s most active areas for seismic movement. this is the scene in the turkish city of sanliurfa where rescue efforts are continuing this morning. in a moment we will speak to our correspondent anna foster, who is in the city of marash for us. first, this report by howard johnson. the desperate search for survivors continued overnight, often in bitterly cold conditions. but with each hour that passes, the chance of finding more people alive diminishes. in worst hit hatay, turkey, a grim scene brightened by the smiles of rescuers. a woman has just been pulled alive