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Quake caused direct damage of US$5.1 bil in Syria: World Bank

Direct damages to residential buildings account for nearly half of total, report says

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 04 Mar 2023 10:30AM

Quake caused direct damage of US$5.1 bil in Syria: World Bank
In a separate assessment last month, the World Bank has estimated that the earthquakes that struck Turkiye and Syria on February 6 caused some US$34.2 billion in direct physical damage in Turkiye . – AFP pic, March 4, 2023

WASHINGTON – A massive earthquake and aftershocks in February caused an estimated US$5.1 billion (RM22.8 billion) in direct physical damage in Syria, said the World Bank yesterday.

The earthquake that struck on February 6 hit Turkiye and Syria, devastating scores of cities and killing more than 50,000 people in both countries.

Millions have been left needing urgent help with accommodation and medical care.

“The current value of the damaged and destroyed capital stock is estimated at about 10% of GDP,” said the World Bank in its latest estimate.

“The widespread damages impacted four governorates, where around 10 million of Syria’s population resides,” the report said.

The development lender added that its report does not cover broader economic impacts and losses for Syria, such as production or business interruption.

The most severely-hit governorate was Aleppo, with 45% of the estimated damages. This was followed by Idlib and Lattakia.

A subsequent earthquake on February 20 caused added damage, and continued aftershocks are likely to add to damage estimates over time, said the World Bank.

Direct damages to residential buildings account for nearly half of the total, while infrastructure damages amounted to 18% of the total.

“These losses compound years of destruction, suffering and hardship the people of Syria have been enduring,” said Jean-Christophe Carret, World Bank country director for the Middle East department.

“The disaster will cause a decline in economic activity that will further weigh on Syria’s growth prospects,” he added.

In a separate assessment last month, the bank estimated the earthquakes caused some US$34.2 billion in direct physical damage in Turkiye. – AFP, March 4, 2023

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