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“Apocalisse Turchia”: Turkey-Syria Earthquake On 24 World Newspaper Front Pages

International newspapers are relaying the destruction and drama after a powerful earthquake devastated southeastern Turkey near the Syrian border Monday, killing more than 5,000.

“Apocalisse Turchia”: Turkey-Syria Earthquake On 24 World Newspaper Front Pages
Hugo Perrin-Paulus

More than 5,000 people were killed and at least 15,000 injured in southeastern Turkey and over the border in Syria, as a 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck in the early hours of Monday near the city of Gaziantep, followed by numerous powerful aftershocks.

The race against the clock has now begun for rescuers to find survivors in the rubble, amid winter weather conditions. The World Health Organization is warning that the death toll may rise dramatically as more victims are found amid the debris.

Here is a selection of how international newspapers featured the death, devastation and faint hopes of finding survivors, on their front pages Tuesday morning.

Hürriyet (Turkey)


Hurriyet

Milliyet (Turkey)

Milliyet

Dünya (Turkey)

Dünya

Die Tageszeitung (Germany)

Die Tageszeitung

ABC (Spain)

ABC

El Periódico de España​ (Spain)

El Periódico de España

Libération (France)

Libération

Le Dauphiné Libéré (France)

Le Dauphiné Libéré

La Croix (France)

La Croix

La Stampa (Italy)

La Stampa

Diário de Noticias (Portugal)

Diário de Noticias

The Guardian (UK)

The Guardian

Folha de São Paulo (Brazil)

Folha de São Paulo

Correo Sur (Bolivia)

Correo Sur

Las Últimas Noticias (Chile)

Las Últimas Noticias

La Cronica De Hoy (Mexico)

La Cronica De Hoy

Hoy (Argentina)

Hoy

The New York Times (USA)

The New York Times

The Wall Street Journal (USA)

The Wall Street Journal

Financial Times

Financial Times

The Gazette (Canada)

The Gazette

The Jerusalem Post (Israel)

The Jerusalem Post

The Star (South Africa)

The Star

​Lianhe Zaobao (Singapore)

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Economy

LNG Carriers, Europe's Floating Response To Russia's Gas War

From Croatia to Spain, Portugal, Germany and France, revamped LNG gas routes are providing an agile European energy response to the cutting off of Russian gas since the war in Ukraine began.

LNG Carriers, Europe's Floating Response To Russia's Gas War

January 2023, Brunsbüttel (Germany): The floating LNG terminal, at the quay of the industrial port of Brunsbüttel.

Marcus Brandt / dpa via ZUMA Press
Vincent Collen

KRK — Tourists know the island of Krk, in northern Croatia, for its heavenly coves that open onto the Adriatic Sea’s translucent waters. But now, Krk will also be known for its strategic role in the energy security of Croatia and Central Europe.

Not far from the beaches, a 280-meter-long ship carrying natural gas is moored in a bay, protected from storms. This blue and white ship, known as the “LNG Croatia” has been completely reconfigured to become a liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal.

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Over the past two years, more than fifty LNG carriers have unloaded their valuable cargo in Krk — mainly from the Gulf of Mexico, in the United States, but also from Qatar, Egypt, Nigeria, Trinidad and elsewhere.

In the countries where it is produced, the gas is cooled at a temperature of minus 160°C, so it can be transported in liquid form. After arriving at Krk, it is transferred to the "LNG Croatia” ship, where it is heated with seawater and becomes gaseous again, and then transported ashore through a large pipe. Once ashore, the gas is pressurized and injected into a pipeline that flows into the Croatian gas network, as well as pipelines that connect to neighboring Slovenia and Hungary.

The LNG Croatia is a boat that no longer sails. But Boris Martic, its captain, is still surprised by his country’s new situation. “All around here, it’s crowded with tourists in the summer,” he says, pointing from the sunny deck of the vessel. "I would have never imagined, only a few years ago, that Croatia was going to become an LNG import hub.”

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