in places like this, trying to get food, water, power is very difficult, you can see the wind swirling around and that catches great clouds of dust and tiny particles of rubble and glass, making it difficult for people to breathe and children playing. one month on, things are still hard and these are some of the challenges people are going through when they are trying to find shelter. these trains haven t left the station for a month. they re homes instead now to earthquake survivors. yilmaz and five of his family live in this carriage. they sleep on the seats, the few possessions they have around them. translation: they wanted to provide tents to us, but i refused. tents are cold and this place has a notoriously strong wind. when it blows, all the tents will end up on the sea. afad, the turkish disaster
many families still coming the rubble for loved ones. anywhere from 150,000 to 200,000 buildings collapsed, and more than 850,000 children remained displaced. attendance and railway carriages and other temporary shelters for hundreds of thousands of people. 0ur corrrespondent, anna foster, who s been covering the tragedy from the beginning. she reports now from antakya in southern turkey. these trains haven t left the station for a month. they re homes instead now, to earthquake survivors. yilmaz and five of his family live in this carriage. they sleep on the seats, the few possessions they have around them. translation: they wanted to provide tents to us, but i refused. afad the turkish disaster management agency says around 2 million people have left the quake zone altogether.
0ur corrrespondent, anna foster, who s been covering the tragedy from the beginning. she reports now from antakya in southern turkey. these trains haven t left the station for a month. they re homes instead now, to earthquake survivors. yilmaz and five of his family live in this carriage. they sleep on the seats, the few possessions they have around them. translation: they wanted to provide tents to us, but i refused. afad the turkish disaster management agency says around 2 million people have left the quake zone altogether. 1.5 million more are still here, and struggling. there s anger too, that so many buildings were allowed to have design features that struggled to withstand an earthquake. more than 160,000 either collapsed or were badly damaged. and it wasn tjust the old ones.
for oliver at the moment. we ve got such amazing examples of youngsters today and what they re able to achieve. no head shaving for you, but a lovely pink do. thank you very much. i got up very early to do this. after ten minutes or so, the cuts were complete. i honestlyjust don t know what to say. they ve supported me through all of this and i think they were just brave to do it. so you all feeling good now, boys? yep, yep. bit cold on my head, but.! and how do you think they look now? like me. and that s good, isn t it? yeah! unless, of course, parents take the wrong children home after school! with that, it was time to reveal the latest oliver s army fundraising total, which is now past £17,000. ian haslam, bbc news. what an uplifting way to end that,