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Features|Turkey-Syria Earthquake

A boy’s arduous steps on prosthetic legs after Turkey’s earthquake

Mehmet Koc survived the collapse of a five-storey building that crushed his legs and killed his brother and mother.

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A boy's arduous steps on prosthetic legs after Turkey's earthquake
Mehmet Koc, 13, sits on a bed at London's Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital for a prosthetics fitting. [Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters]
By Reuters
Published On 6 Feb 20246 Feb 2024

When a devastating earthquake struck Turkey in the early hours of February 6, 2023, the five-storey building in Hatay where 13-year-old Mehmet Koc lived, collapsed, burying him in rubble and killing his older brother Emre, 14, and his mother Didem.

Mehmet survived. But it took 76 hours before rescuers could pull him from the mound of concrete and twisted metal that remained of his home. Later in hospital, doctors determined that his legs were so badly crushed and injured, that both needed to be amputated just below the hip.

Hearing of the earthquake in London where he lived and worked, Mehmet’s father, Hasan, caught the next available flight to Turkey and travelled to Hatay, in the southeast, desperate for news of his family.

The 58-year-old encountered a scene of utter destruction. While he learned his wife and elder son had not survived, Mehmet was alive but trapped. He stood vigil amid the rubble with other relatives.

Hasan could not speak to his son himself, but passed messages to a teenage neighbour, Hayrettin, trapped closer to the surface, whose words could reach Mehmet, and who talked to him to keep him awake as rescuers came closer.

A boy's arduous steps on prosthetic legs after Turkey's earthquake
Dogs walk past rubble from damaged buildings in Antakya, Hatay province, Turkey, February 23, 2023 [Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters]

Speaking in a hospital in Turkey last February, Mehmet said, “I was yelling ‘help’. Our neighbour Hayrettin was telling me when to yell and I was yelling for help when he told me to.”

“I did not feel or think anything when I was rescued, I was confused. I wanted water when they rescued me. My family was waiting for me outside and I saw them right after I was pulled out from the rubble,” he continued, adding he had no sense of how long he had been trapped.

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Doctors in Turkey said if he had reached them just one hour later, he could have died.

Mehmet spent two months in hospital in Turkey before he was well enough to fly to the United Kingdom. Hasan, who first arrived in the UK in the 1990s and holds British citizenship, found his son’s crumpled British passport in the rubble.

A year on, father and son live together in Hasan’s small flat in Hackney, east London, both grieving for their loved ones and gradually coming to terms with the tragedy.

“We are trying to get used to life,” said Hasan.

“Mehmet started school and is getting better. He is supporting me now, he tells me, ‘Dad, we cannot bring them back or change what happened. Let’s forget about it all and move on.'”

Looking after his son, managing his many medical appointments and applying for support and social services is a huge task. Friends within the local Turkish community help where they can but Hasan has given up his job as a school caretaker to look after him.

“I am very sad but I try not to show it when I am around him. He is very brave and he supports me a lot,” Hasan said.

Mehmet is being treated at the Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital, an hour’s drive across London from his home.

He has received prosthetic legs, and in the hospital, he practises taking steps and doing exercises to build his strength.

However, the legs are a struggle to get used to. They take time to fit correctly, and as he grows, they will need to be frequently adjusted. He may also face more surgery.

A boy's arduous steps on prosthetic legs after Turkey's earthquake
Mehmet in his wheelchair at the Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital in London [Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters]

Doctors estimate it requires 300 percent more energy to walk across a flat surface with bilateral above-knee prosthetics than natural walking, and for children, it is particularly hard.

Mehmet enjoys playing computer games, stays in touch with Turkish school friends, and speaks to relatives in Turkey, including his grandmother. He has always loved football. He says his favourite English team is Manchester City, and Norwegian striker Erling Haaland is a particular hero.

He has now started at a school in London, having previously been visited by a teacher at home, arranged by the local council.

“It has been lovely teaching Mehmet and getting to know him better,” said Simon Joseph, a medical needs service teacher at Hackney Council.

“Over the weeks, his warm and friendly nature has emerged more and more. He has a wonderful sense of humour, especially when it comes to trying out new words in English.”

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Turkey’s deadliest earthquake in modern times killed more than 50,000 people and left hundreds of thousands with life-changing injuries. In Syria, it killed some 5,900 people.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has pledged to rebuild homes and cities, but the World Health Organization has warned the psychological stress for those caught up in the disaster is immense.

A boy's arduous steps on prosthetic legs after Turkey's earthquake
Mehmet is comforted by his maternal grandmother Emine Karalioglu, 63, in Mersin hospital after having the bandages on his amputated legs changed in the aftermath of the deadly earthquake in Mersin, Turkey, February 17 2023. [Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters]
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A boy's arduous steps on prosthetic legs after Turkey's earthquake
Pencil marks on a colouring book belonging to Mehmet Koc as he rests in his hospital bed after having the bandages on his amputated legs changed. [Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters]
A boy's arduous steps on prosthetic legs after Turkey's earthquake
Hasan and his late wife's mother, Emine Karalioglu, react in the hallway of Mersin hospital while his son Mehmet screams as nurses change the bandages. [Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters]
A building safety surveyor walks past rubble from damaged buildings in Antakya, Hatay province, February 25, 2023. [Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters]
A boy's arduous steps on prosthetic legs after Turkey's earthquake
Hasan Koc holds his mobile phone displaying a picture of his late wife, Didem, 46, who died in the earthquake. [Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters]
A boy's arduous steps on prosthetic legs after Turkey's earthquake
Hasan pushes his son Mehmet into a garden allotment to attend a picnic hosted by family friend Ali Cinar (L). [Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters]
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A boy's arduous steps on prosthetic legs after Turkey's earthquake
Hasan prepares dinner for his son at his flat in London. [Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters]
A boy's arduous steps on prosthetic legs after Turkey's earthquake
Mehmet lays on a couch in the sitting room. [Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters]
A boy's arduous steps on prosthetic legs after Turkey's earthquake
Hasan holds up a Galatasaray football jersey with his son Mehmet's name on it. [Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters]
A boy's arduous steps on prosthetic legs after Turkey's earthquake
Prosthetist Paul Gandrapu (L) attends to Mehmet on a treatment bed at the Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital for a prosthetics fitting. [Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters]
A boy's arduous steps on prosthetic legs after Turkey's earthquake
Mehmet has received prosthetic legs, and in the hospital, he practises taking steps and doing exercises to build his strength. The legs, however, are a struggle to get used to; they take time to fit correctly, and as he grows, they will need to be frequently adjusted. [Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters]
A boy's arduous steps on prosthetic legs after Turkey's earthquake
Doctors estimate it requires 300 percent more energy to walk across a flat surface with bilateral above-knee prosthetics than natural walking, and for children, it is particularly hard. [Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters]

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