• About
    • Ethics policy
    • Privacy Policy
    • Ownership, funding and corrections
    • Complaints procedure
    • Terms & Conditions
  • Contact
  • Support
  • Newsletter
Brighton and Hove News
27 December, 2025
  • News
    • Politics
    • Business
    • Opinion
    • Community
  • Arts and Culture
    • Music
    • Theatre
    • Food and Drink
  • Sport
    • Brighton and Hove Albion
    • Cricket
  • Newsletter
  • Public notices
  • Advertise
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Politics
    • Business
    • Opinion
    • Community
  • Arts and Culture
    • Music
    • Theatre
    • Food and Drink
  • Sport
    • Brighton and Hove Albion
    • Cricket
  • Newsletter
  • Public notices
  • Advertise
No Result
View All Result
Brighton and Hove News
No Result
View All Result
Home Brighton

We are global citizens, reaching out to those in Turkey and Syria

by Frank le Duc
Wednesday 8 Feb, 2023 at 4:08PM
A A
1
Brighton and Hove’s record on refugees is nowhere near as good as claimed

Councillor Samer Bagaeen

More than a thousand people from Turkey and Syria have made their home in Brighton and Hove and work or study here. Some will have links with the areas affected by two devastating earthquakes on Monday (6 February).

Many others in Brighton and Hove will also have followed the news from the area and wanted to help – some in practical ways and others by making a donation to the relief efforts.

The earthquakes had magnitudes of 7.8 and 7.5 on the Richter scale and struck almost consecutively in south-eastern Turkey and in neighbouring war-ravaged northern Syria, affecting camps, villages and cities.

The impact has been substantial on some communities because the two earthquakes struck in the early hours of the morning while people were asleep.

The damage has been devastating. At the time of writing, reports – mostly from Turkey – estimated that at least 9,000 people had been killed. The death toll is expected to rise significantly, especially as reports from Syria have started coming in.

Tens of thousands more will have been injured and displaced while thousands of buildings have been destroyed. Some collapsed. Others have been left badly damaged and unsafe.

The situation has been exacerbated this week by a regional snow storm affecting all of the eastern Mediterranean.

The low temperatures will make the job of the rescuers harder and will most certainly deepen existing systems vulnerabilities, such as war, refugees in camps, internally displaced people across the region and already stretched health systems.

This disaster shows how vulnerable communities end up taking the brunt of multiple stresses and shocks that affect their neighbourhoods.

It also shows the critical importance of “precovery” in addition to recovery, ie, building capacity and resilience to compounded shocks before they strike in addition to an effective recovery effort after they strike.

Some cities, and countries, have been fortunate in that they get the importance of anticipating, assessing, preventing where they can, mitigating, responding to and recovering from known, unknown, sudden, direct, indirect or emerging contingency risks.

Sometimes we see these risks coming. In most cases, we cannot anticipate earthquakes even though their impact teaches us about the importance of “whole society resilience”.

This incorporates not just the physical infrastructure, design coding and standards but social resilience and the resilience of critical care and emergency sectors.

It is no good to anyone if a hospital is built to high standards for earthquake resilience if the roads leading to it are not.

I highlighted this week the need for enforcing design codes and building standards to protect lives and livelihoods in a piece published by Peter Beaumont in the Guardian.

Yet, in numerous editions of the World Economic Forum’s Global Risks Report over the past few years, including the 2023 edition, natural disasters barely merit a mention.

We know how, without warning, earthquakes can cause loss of human life, damage to ecosystems, destruction of property and financial loss on a large scale.

And, now, since the publication of the 2023 report, nature has given us not one but two large magnitude earthquakes in a part of the world that has been straining under the pressure of the ongoing stresses of conflict and migration.

There was a smaller magnitude earthquake measuring 5.5 in Jordan this morning (Wednesday 8 February) – one of many aftershocks.

Among those working on the ground are the British charity RedR UK. I’ve worked with them in the past on the Syrian refugee crisis. To make a donation, clock here.

RedR UK is helping the earthquake response with technical support, advice and training on structural damage assessments, entering buildings safely and, when the time is right, repair and seismic retrofitting.

One of the things that they have received numerous requests for are technical advisers willing to provide remote or in-country support to those responding – humanitarians and local organisations – without technical knowledge.

If any of our residents in and around Brighton and Hove want to and are able to volunteer with RedR then I am happy to connect them to the team co-ordinating technical recovery support.

In the meantime, let’s all keep the victims and their families in our thoughts and prayers.

Councillor Samer Bagaeen is a professor of planning and systems resilience and a Conservative member of Brighton and Hove City Council. He was born in Jordan.

ShareTweetShareSendSendShare

Comments 1

  1. Liz Strutt says:
    3 years ago

    Is there a collection point in Brighton for clothes?

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Liz Strutt Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Most read

Brighton-born boy, 13, stabbed to death in Portugal

Woman raped in Hove

College plans new football pitch and games area

Brighton and Hove Albion players given Christmas fixture at home

We are global citizens, reaching out to those in Turkey and Syria

Bell at oldest church to ring in Christmas Day after years of silence

Route and frequency of new bus service come in for criticism

Hove man pleads guilty to seafront sexual assaults

Your top stories this year – January

First face ID arrest made in Brighton

Newsletter

Arts and Culture

  • All
  • Music
  • Theatre
  • Food and Drink
Tributes – Day 3 of 3: The Bootleg Beatles perform The Beatles

Tributes – Day 3 of 3: The Bootleg Beatles perform The Beatles

22 December 2025
Tributes – Day 2 of 3: Absolute Bowie perform David Bowie set at Concorde 2

Tributes – Day 2 of 3: Absolute Bowie perform David Bowie set at Concorde 2

21 December 2025
FLIP Fabrique: Blizzard

FLIP Fabrique: Blizzard

21 December 2025
A Town Called Christmas – Preview

A Town Called Christmas – Preview

20 December 2025
Load More

Sport

  • All
  • Brighton and Hove Albion
  • Cricket
Brighton and Hove Albion draw a blank against Sunderland

Brighton and Hove Albion players given Christmas fixture at home

by PA sport staff
24 December 2025
0

With two away games looming, Brighton and Hove Albion’s players have been given a home fixture this Christmas. Head coach...

No surprises – just another routine win for Brighton and Hove Albion against Manchester United

Welbeck could return for Brighton and Hove Albion trip to Arsenal

by PA sport staff
23 December 2025
0

Former Gunner Danny Welbeck could make a return to the Brighton and Hove Albion match-day squad in time for the...

Hürzeler says Brighton and Hove Albion may need to ‘win ugly’

Brighton and Hove Albion boss speaks out after Seagulls drop more points

by Frank le Duc
22 December 2025
0

Brighton and Hove Albion boss Fabian Hürzeler has spoken out after the Seagulls dropped more points at the weekend. The...

Brighton and Hove Albion draw a blank against Sunderland

Brighton and Hove Albion draw a blank against Sunderland

by Ed Elliot - PA
20 December 2025
0

Brighton and Hove Albion 0 Sunderland 0 December remained winless for Brighton and Hove Albion as they were held to...

Load More
February 2023
M T W T F S S
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728  
« Jan   Mar »

RSS From Sussex News

  • Sussex boy, 13, stabbed to death while trying to protect his mother 25 December 2025
  • Snapchat paedophile jailed for trying to groom three girls 24 December 2025
  • Three teenage boys in court after fatal stabbing 23 December 2025
  • Japanese knotweed specialists from Sussex win national award 22 December 2025
  • Woman hit by car suffers serious injuries 21 December 2025
ADVERTISEMENT
  • About
  • Contact
  • Support
  • Newsletter
  • Privacy
  • Complaints
  • Ownership, funding and corrections
  • Ethics
  • T&C

© 2023 Brighton and Hove News

No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Opinion
  • Arts and Culture
    • Music
    • Theatre
  • Sport
    • Cricket
  • Newsletter
  • Public notices
  • Advertise
  • About
  • Contact

© 2023 Brighton and Hove News