The Daily - Why So Many Buildings Collapsed in Turkey
Episode Date: February 28, 2023The 7.8-magnitude earthquake that struck Turkey and Syria on Feb. 6 left more than 50,000 people dead. The sight of rescuers combing the rubble has prompted questions about why so many buildings seeme...d so inadequate to resist the shaking earth.In Turkey, the government has turned the focus onto builders and property developers, accusing them of chasing profit over safety. But the reality is far more complicated.Guest: Ben Hubbard, the Istanbul bureau chief for The New York Times.Background reading: Some in Turkey wonder whether the number of fatalities caused by the quake could have been cut significantly with better building standards.As the death toll rose, the Turkish government came under growing criticism.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.Â
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From The New York Times, I'm Sabrina Tavernisi, and this is The Daily.
The scale of death in the earthquake in Turkey and Syria is now raising questions about who is to blame.
In Turkey, the government has placed that blame squarely on builders and property developers,
accusing them of choosing profits over safety.
But the reality is far more complicated.
Today, my colleague Ben Hubbard on why a good part of the responsibility may rest with the Turkish government itself.
It's Tuesday, February 28th.
So Ben, we're now at more than 50,000 dead in the earthquake in Turkey and Syria.
And for weeks, the question we've all been asking is,
how is it possible that so many people could have died? You've been investigating that question in Turkey, where the loss of life was by far the greatest. Tell us what you've learned so far.
The first thing we need to acknowledge is that this was a very powerful quake,
and it struck a very, very large territory. So that's what we're starting with.
And when I got to the earthquake zone after this had happened, one of the first things that struck
me is that not everything is knocked down. You have this sort of puzzling mosaic of some areas
where the buildings, at least from the outside, look more or less fine. And then all of a sudden,
you'll find one that's like completely flat.
There was one particular site that we went to where there was a work crew working, trying to
rescue some people who were trapped in the rubble. And there just happened to be a bunch of volunteer
construction workers who were standing around sort of willing to help out. They were there with their
hard hats and their equipment and they were inspecting the site and they were commenting on
how the rebar that was there looked like it was poor quality.
The cement looks like it was kind of weak.
One of the guys literally walked over and picked up this big chunk of concrete and sort of tore it apart with his hands.
And they were just all clicking their tongues and just really asking, like, what happened here?
Like, what was wrong with these buildings that fell down?
How were these buildings built?
Then this wondering about these buildings just
turns into anger. Almost a week after the earthquakes, the blame game begins. And the
government responds, and they respond by going after the builders. Turkish authorities have
issued arrest warrants for over 100 people. They include contractors, architects, and engineers
accused of shoddy and illegal construction. They start by arresting construction contractors, people who were linked to some of
these buildings, and then that really accelerates. Two property developers have reportedly been
arrested at airports, accused of trying to flee the country. We've seen people who have been sort
of perp walked on national television with their handcuffs on, sort of marching into the police car.
So far, 188 people arrested, but more than 600 people have now been identified as potential suspects in relation to those allegations of construction negligence.
So the government is really putting the focus on the construction people,
saying that, you know, these people are the problem.
They're the ones who put up these buildings that weren't strong enough.
Okay, so the government is cracking down on the people it says are the guilty parties.
In other words, the builders.
Right, but it turns out it's much, much more complicated than that.
I mean, we, me and my colleagues here in Istanbul,
started looking into this, investigating who these people were, how the industry works, and just trying to
figure out, you know, how did these buildings get built and what were the problems? Why were
there buildings that came down and other ones that didn't? And I was still very early in the process.
It's difficult to sort of even identify some of these buildings and figure out who was responsible for them, who built them.
But what we found is that the story really starts back in 1999.
This was when you had the last really massive earthquake in Turkey.
Desperate rescue efforts were underway in western Turkey today after a massive earthquake struck during the night.
This is a very powerful earthquake that hits the city of Izmit,
which is not far from Istanbul.
Some buildings swayed and survived, while others collapsed.
According to local people, this one here may have fallen
because the top two stories were jerry-built without official permission.
There's huge, huge damage to this city,
collapsed buildings and people buried.
And it's just really, it's just a terrible situation.
It kills more than 17,000 people.
And the government is just wildly lambasted for its response.
This is do-it-yourself rescue and it is chaos.
There's just this sense that they had no ability to respond in time
to get rescuers, to get aid in place for survivors.
But as their shock wears off, the people's anger is starting to show.
A few years later, we have this huge economic crisis
that really hits people's pocketbooks.
And all of this together, this sense of just the country being so vulnerable
to this terrible natural disaster,
plus all of the economic pain of this crisis,
just creates this huge anger at the government that had been in place at the time.
And this new party called the Justice and Development Party sort of rides this wave of anger.
What you're telling me with this welcome, with this interest,
is that Turkey will go through a major change after the November elections.
They really campaigned on this idea that they were going to be more competent,
less corrupt and more transparent than the previous guys.
I mean, the basic idea was that the previous parties had messed everything up
and we're going to come in and
we're going to do a much, much better job. The Justice and Development Party won an overwhelming
victory in Sunday's national elections. Enough voters believed that, that they brought them
into the parliament and they ended up with the ability in 2003 to name the prime minister
and they chose at that time this up-and-coming politician
named Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
So Recep Tayyip Erdogan,
who's been running the country
for 20 years now,
he really rises to power
in a lot of ways off the back
of this bungled political response
from the previous government.
It definitely contributes to his rise.
And then, you know,
in the next number of years, the country really takes off.
Green fields on the outskirts of Istanbul.
Fields that will soon be transformed into a massive building site.
There's great economic growth.
And a large part of that is really this idea of sort of build, build, build.
The skyline is changing rapidly as the city grows upwards and outwards.
Everything is going higher,
faster, and further.
When new buildings replace the old,
a different economic class will move here.
There's large parts of society that rise into the middle class.
There'll be upmarket properties designed
to appeal to Turkey's burgeoning middle classes.
This idea that, you know,
you as a Turkish family
can sort of have your own apartment in a nice city,
and this becomes a reality for huge parts of the population
that were before, you know, quite impoverished.
New shopping malls are opening up on an almost monthly basis.
And there's just construction happening everywhere at this point.
And there's plenty of land waiting for development.
And there's plenty of land waiting for development.
So Erdogan's solution after the 1999 earthquake and economic crisis is to actually invest in building and development as a way to revive Turkey's economy.
Right. But the dark side of all this construction is that Turkey has very, very active fault lines in large parts of the country.
This is a land that has histories of earthquakes going back as long as there is recorded history and really every reason to believe that there will be future powerful earthquakes.
So one of the things that the government is doing is really trying to reform how buildings are built,
upgrading building codes, upgrading standards for materials
to try to ensure that the new buildings that are built are going building codes, upgrading standards for materials to try to
ensure that the new buildings that are built are going to be able to withstand earthquakes.
Right, because they don't want the buildings to collapse like they did in 1999.
Yes, and so they've done things like upgrading the engineering calculations that you have to do
to decide how much structure you need to support a building of a certain size. There's been work on the standards
for what kind of materials you use,
whether it's concrete or iron or rebar
or these sorts of things,
and upgrading this basically as the technology develops.
And this process has been going on for a long time,
but where Turkey's at now,
everybody that we talked to
basically said the codes are world-class.
Theoretically, these codes are some of the best
that you could come up with to create earthquake-proof buildings. But when we've started
looking into this in the last two weeks, what really became clear is that in a lot of cases,
they're just not followed. Hold on. So the Turkish government realizes there's a risk to all this
construction. They upgrade their building codes. But why aren't people following them? Part of it
is that in the midst of this building boom, there's this kind of Wild West atmosphere
that emerges. So you ended up having huge problems in the inspections regime. Ideally,
to make sure that the rules are followed, you're going to have smart, independent inspectors going
out, looking at the sites, finding out where things are not being done correctly, where poor
materials are being used. And in a lot of cases, this is just not happening.
There was a practice of construction companies being able to hire private inspection companies
to come out to their sites and do the inspections.
Private inspection companies?
Like, isn't that the government's job?
Of course, it should be the government's job, but they were able to hire these private companies.
And private inspection companies want to keep getting work.
And if they get a reputation for shutting down people's projects, they're not going to get hired anymore. So they sort of have
an incentive to approve projects that maybe they should not. Wow, that's complete conflict of
interest, right? That's crazy. Well, it gets even worse than that because in some cases, according
to a lot of the industry professionals we talked to, construction companies would actually set up
their own inspection companies.
And so they would effectively be hiring themselves
to inspect their own projects.
So the government just completely abdicated responsibility
for this really important function.
I would say there were significant holes
in the checks that were put in place to ensure
that these codes were followed. And the result of that is that there were buildings that went up
that were not nearly as strong as they should have been. We'll be right back.
We'll be right back.
So, Ben, you've just finished telling us that Turkey's earthquake codes were really world class, but they weren't really enforced.
So, is Erdogan just fine with all of this?
Like, isn't he worried that this could come back to bite him? Yeah, I mean, you would think because of his history that, you know, of all the politicians in Turkey, he would be incredibly attuned to the
tremendous power that earthquakes have to affect politics. But there hasn't been a whole lot of
sign of that. And in fact, this government has been quite cavalier about it. I mean, over the
years, they've pushed through these things that are known as building amnesties. What are they?
So there are lots of buildings in Turkey that are not up to code.
And over time, the government becomes aware of these.
Either inspectors find that, you know,
somebody has enclosed their balcony without a permit.
Somebody has added a few floors to their building,
perhaps to earn a bit of extra rent money.
Somebody has decided to sell the ground floor to some business
who cuts out some of the pillars to get more space. And this comes to the government's attention
either because inspectors find it or because the neighbors sue. So you have these cases of code
violations that just pile up and pile up. And every once in a while, the government basically
issues an amnesty where they wipe the slate clean. The way that it works is that if you
have been reported
for having done something to your building that violates the code, you pay a fine. And in a lot
of cases, people don't even have to fix what it is that they had the code violation for, even if
it's something like cutting the ground floor pillars of a building, which could very much make it more vulnerable than an earthquake.
So basically, the government is waiving all of these violations, despite the fact that they could lead to some pretty dangerous situations.
Right.
So on top of the fact that the system of building inspections is pretty spotty, even when the
inspections do turn something up and they find violations of the building code, the government sometimes just forgives them. But why?
Well, there's a number of reasons. First is that the government earns money off of it. I mean, everybody who has code violations that they want forgiven, they pay a fine. In the most recent amnesty, this ended up bringing more than $4 billion into the government purse.
So there's a reason that the government likes it.
And voters really like it.
People invest money in property.
If you're a hardworking Turkish family and you've taken your savings and you've bought a family apartment or a family home,
the last thing you want is for the government to come and find a code violation and condemn the building or knock it down because you're going to lose your investment. So people love these things. And this is why they tend to happen during elections.
The most recent one was put in place during the presidential election in 2018. And the year after,
Erdogan goes on the campaign trail in local elections and is basically bragging about it
to people saying, look at this great thing that we did. In this town, we forgave X number of code violations. And portraying this as this great service that
we've done to the people. And ultimately, this most recent round of amnesty, they ended up
forgiving code violations on more than 7 million units across the country.
Which sounds like a lot of units. Is it? How do I understand that number?
Yeah, I mean, it's a country of about 80
million people. So yeah, 7 million units, it's a lot of units. But weren't people worried about
the safety of their homes? I mean, there are definitely people who are concerned.
You know, there's a whole group of seismologists in Turkey who have really been sounding the alarm
and making it very clear that according to all of the science, it's just
only a matter of time before more powerful earthquakes hit Turkey. I think a lot of them
feel like nobody really listens to them. You do have inspectors, you do have engineers and people
pointing things out. I mean, there was a couple that we interviewed, two lawyers who had filed
51 court cases against this one builder in their town because they thought that he was violating the code all over the place.
So there were definitely people who were looking out for this.
But there's something that I think is just human nature
in thinking about something like an earthquake
that nobody knows when it's going to happen.
It could happen tomorrow.
It could happen next week.
It could happen 100 years from now.
I think it's sometimes hard before the actual earthquake comes for people to conceive what it's going to look like and what it's going to mean for their lives.
And, you know, it allows people to kind of go along with this magical thinking of like, maybe we'll just dodge the bullet.
Like it's a distant danger, not an immediate one.
And therefore, I'm going to think about it on a different day.
I'm not going to think about it today.
therefore I'm going to think about it on a different day. I'm not going to think about it today. I mean, it's not unlike climate change in that it's this danger that people know is sort of
looming in the future. But even if you're convinced that it's there, it's still in your daily life
feels kind of remote. And in the meantime, you have other things to worry about that feel much
more pressing. And so it's, I think, human nature to focus on the things that are right before you.
Right. But it's incumbent on government
to actually force people to do the right thing, right, collectively. But in this case, the Turkish
government didn't. It actually made things worse, which leads me back to Erdogan. He's arrested
these builders, but what about him? Will he and his party have to pay a price for this?
Well, the big test is going to be elections. There are parliamentary and presidential elections
expected in May. And these are crucial for him. I mean, he would like to stay in power.
He's been having a hard time in the polls this year, largely because of economic troubles at
home. Lots of voters were quite mad at the way that he had been running the country before the
earthquake even hit. And
then they have this huge natural disaster that's killed all these people. And it's hard to see how
that benefits him at all in this election. And so he's been almost every day, he's been down in the
earthquake zone with this very grave look on his face, wearing this long black coat, meeting with
people who were living in tent cities, meeting with earthquake victims and seeing the rubble.
And, you know, really showing this kind of tangible connection with this disaster that's
gone on.
And we're going to have to wait and see how that really resonates with voters.
He has not spoken much about everything that we've been talking about, about how did all
these buildings end up getting built that didn't seem like they were done right to withstand
an earthquake.
The most that he said is,
we as a country have things that we need to learn
from this disaster,
and we should do better in the future.
That's kind of as much as we've gotten.
But interestingly, what he's promised,
I think the biggest promise that he's made to his people
is that we're going to rebuild.
Basically, there's going to be more construction.
He said that we're going to start in March,
and he wants to rebuild homes for all these people within a year. I mean, which is quite remarkable
and incredibly ambitious promise. So instead of saying we need enforcement, we really need to
look at how we're doing this. He's saying construction is the answer. Yeah, there's
really a doubling down on this policy that's been
such a large part of his tenure. It's still build, build, build. That's the solution. And, you know,
Erdogan has proven over the 20 years that he's been on the national stage that he's a survivor.
He's a very deft politician. And, you know, even with a challenge as large as an earthquake of
this magnitude, there's a chance that he's going to push through and that he's going to find a way to win this election.
But there's really also this sense of history echoing itself that, you know,
it was a catastrophic earthquake that helped fuel Erdogan's rise to the national stage.
And here we are 20 years later, and it's another catastrophic earthquake that he's got to face now,
and that, in a lot of ways, could really imperil his political future.
Ben, thank you.
Thank you.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you should know today.
On Monday, Rupert Murdoch, chairman of the conservative media empire that owns Fox News,
acknowledged that several hosts for his networks promoted the false narrative that the 2020 election was stolen from former President Donald Trump.
In court documents released on Monday that are part of a lawsuit by Dominion Voting Systems, Murdoch said that Fox hosts Sean Hannity, Jeanine Pirro, Lou Dobbs, and Maria Bartiromo, quote, I would have liked us to be stronger in denouncing it in hindsight. J. Davis Lynn and Lisa Chow. Contains original music by Rowan Numisto and Marian Lozano and was
engineered by Chris Wood. Our theme music is by Jim Brunberg and Ben Lansford of Wonderly.
That's it for The Daily. I'm Sabrina Tavernisi. See you tomorrow.