The death toll in Monday morning's devastating earthquake in the Turkey-Syria border area has crossed over 2,300, reports said.
The death toll in Turkey has risen again to 1,498, according to the country's disaster management agency, and 810 in Syria, the BBC reported.
The 7.8 magnitude quake struck near Turkey's Gaziantep early on Monday (local time) while a new 7.5-magnitude tremor hit at around 1.30 p.m. local time and was described, by officials, as a new quake, "not an aftershock".
Russian President Vladimir Putin sent messages of condolence to his Turkish and Syrian counterparts Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Bashar al Assad and said his government was ready to help. Russian rescue teams have been sent to both countries to assist at the disaster sites, RT reported.
#Turkey | Death toll update- Turkey-Syria quake rises to 1541 in turkey and 911 in syria#deprem #earthquake #sismo #kahramanmaraş #Terremoto #pazarcık #Gaziantep #şanlıurfa #diyarbakır #malatya pic.twitter.com/lAbSwqanuQ
— CLIMATE Change ?️?❄️ (@weatheralert15) February 6, 2023
Other countries like Azerbaijan, Germany, Greece, India, Israel, Serbia, Spain, the UK and the US have also offered help.
(With inputs from IANS)