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Manchester Evening News
Manchester Evening News
National
John Scheerhout

Greater Manchester firefighters fly to earthquake-hit Turkey as part of international search and rescue operation

Specialist firefighters from Greater Manchester have flown out to help following the devastating earthquake in Turkey and Syria.

As the death toll from the earthquake topped 5,000, it emerged four firefighters based in Greater Manchester have flown to Turkey to help with the rescue and humanitarian operation.

Martin Foran, station manager at Ramsbottom fire station, firefighter David Hedgecock from Ashton, and firefighter Steven Pennington from Leigh were among the four who flew out this morning.

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Trained in how to operate in disaster zones, they will join UK volunteer team of search and rescue specialists. as part of the UK International Search and Rescue Team, a volunteer service made up of specialists from 15 fire services who are deployed to humanitarian incidents or disasters anywhere in the world.

Assistant Chief Fire Officer Barry Moore, of Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service, said: "Our thoughts go out to the many thousands across Turkey and Syria who have tragically lost loved ones and livelihoods in these earthquakes, and to the emergency responders working to locate and rescue survivors. We know that those rescue efforts are taking place in challenging winter conditions, compounding what is already a very difficult operation.

Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service (MANCHESTER EVENING NEWS)

"Four of our firefighters have now arrived in Turkey and will rapidly be deployed to assist search and rescue operations in the affected areas. As part of the UK-ISAR team, they are trained in the use of specialist skills and equipment and ready to respond to any humanitarian disaster that takes place anywhere in the world."

Working as part of UK-ISAR, Manchester firefighters have previously been deployed to floods in Bosnia and Herzegovina in 2014, the earthquake and tsunami that struck Japan in 2011, and the earthquake that hit Haiti in 2010.

In October 2021 GMFRS hosted a UKISAR training exercise in Bury, designed to simulate the effects of an earthquake and test UK crews’ urban search and rescue capabilities. The exercise involved more than 70 personnel from across the country, with crews confronted by collapsed buildings, displaced people, trapped and injured casualties and other challenging scenarios.

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