The dog Aleks, a big mongrel with light eyes, was extricated from the ruins of Antakya 23 days after the earthquake which devastated this major city in southern Turkey, local press reported on Thursday.
The dog Aleks was held prisoner in concrete slabs that formed like a pit as it collapsed in the 7.8-magnitude quake that struck shortly after 4 a.m. on February 6, according to images of the rescue released by the Turkish news agency DHA.
It was the owner of the dog, Murat Arici, who heard his complaint and warned a rescue team dispatched by the municipality of Konya (center).
“Aleks, come my dog,” say rescuers in the video.
“Well… well done son,” they blurt out before they can grab the big dog, shaggy but apparently healthy.
Aleks was entrusted to the good care of an association for the protection of animals (Haytap) to be examined before being returned to his master.
Rescuers have rescued hundreds of cats, dogs, birds, rabbits and even cows and sheep trapped in ruined buildings in southern Turkey.
The last survivors, a couple, were discovered in Antakya on February 18.
Since then, searches have been officially suspended in nine of the 11 affected provinces, with the exception of Hatay and Kahramanmaras, where the epicenter was located.
The earthquake, considered the worst disaster ever suffered in contemporary Turkey, killed more than 45,000 people and more than 5,000 others in neighboring Syria, and devastated hundreds of thousands of buildings.