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                      | Ebrahim  Zakeriya, (left) and his mother Duha Nasrallah, wounded survivors of a  devastating earthquake, receive treatment at a hospital in the coastal city of  Latakia, Syria, Saturday, February 11, 2023.    --Photo AP |  Survivors still being found as quake death toll  tops 28,000
 LATAKIA, Syria (AP) -- Ibrahim Zakaria lost track of time drifting into  and out of consciousness while trapped for nearly five days in the rubble of  his home following the massive earthquake that struck Turkiye and Syria this  week.
 The 23-year-old cellphone shop  worker from the Syrian town of Jableh survived on dirty drips of water and  eventually lost hope that he’d be saved.  “I said I am dead and it will be impossible for me to live again,” Zakaria, who  was rescued Friday night, told The Associated Press on Saturday from his bed at  a hospital in the coastal city of Latakia where his 60-year-old mother, Duha  Nurallah, was also recovering. Five days after two powerful earthquakes hours  apart caused thousands of buildings to collapse, killing more than 28,000  people and leaving millions homeless, rescuers were still pulling unlikely  survivors from the ruins one of them just 7 months old.
 Although each rescue elicited hugs and shouts of “Allahu akbar!” “God is great!” from the weary  men and women working tirelessly in the freezing temperatures to save lives,  they were the exception in a region blanketed by grief, desperation and  mounting frustration. More than a dozen survivors were rescued Saturday,  including a family in Kahramanmaras, the Turkish city closest to the  epicentre of Monday’s quake. Crews there helped 12-year-old Nehir Naz Narli to  safety before going back for her parents.
 In Gaziantep province, which borders Syria, a family  of five was rescued from a demolished building in the city of Nurdagi, and a  man and his 3-year-old daughter were pulled from debris in the town of  Islahiye, television network HaberTurk reported. A 7-year-old girl was also  rescued in Hatay province.
 In Elbistan, a district in Kahramanmaras province,  20-year-old Melisa Ulku and another person  were saved from the rubble 132 hours after the quake struck. Before she was  brought to safety, police asked onlookers not to cheer or clap so as not to interfere  with nearby rescue efforts.
 Turkish TV station NTV reported that a 44-year-old man in Iskenderun, in Hatay province, was rescued  138 hours into his ordeal. Crying rescuers called it a miracle, with one saying  they weren’t expecting to find anyone alive but as they were digging,  they saw his eyes and he said his name.
 In the  same province, NTV also reported that a baby  boy named Hamza was found alive in Antakya 140 hours after the quake. Some  details of his rescue, including how he survived so long, weren’t  immediately clear.
 (Latest Update Februay 13, 2023)
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