ERCIS, Turkey (Reuters) ? Tens of thousands of people spent a second night under canvas, in cars or huddled round small fires in towns rattled by aftershocks from a massive earthquake in eastern Turkey that killed hundreds.
By late Monday the death toll from Sunday's quake had crept up to 279, but hundreds more were still missing.
Casualties were concentrated in the town of Ercis and the provincial capital Van, with officials still checking and confirming fatalities in outlying villages.
"It was like the judgment day," said Mesut Ozan Yilmaz, 18, who survived for 32 hours under the rubble of a tea house where he had been passing time with friends.
Unhurt, but lying on a hospital bed under a thick blanket, his face still blackened by dust and dirt, Yilmaz gave a chilling account to CNN Turk news channel of how he survived by diving under the table.
"The space we had was so narrow. People were fighting for more space to survive," Yilmaz said. "I rested my head on a dead man's foot. I know I would be dead now if I had let myself go psychologically."
As grieving families prepared Tuesday to bury their dead, others kept vigil by the mounds of concrete rubble and masonry, praying rescue teams would find missing loved ones alive.
Rescue teams concentrated efforts in Ercis, a town of 100,000 that was worst hit by the 7.2 magnitude tremor.
NOT ENOUGH TENTS
The Turkish Red Crescent distributed up to 13,000 tents, and was preparing to provide temporary shelter for around 40,000 people, although there were no reliable estimates of the number of people left destitute.
The relief agency was criticized for failing to ensure that some of the most needy, particularly in villages, received tents as temperatures plummeted overnight.
"We were sent 25 tents for 150 homes. Everybody is waiting outside, we've got small children, we've got nothing left," Ahmet Arikes, the 60-year-old headman of Amik, a village outside Van that was reduced to rubble.
Television images showed desperate men pushing roughly to grab tents from the back of a Red Crescent truck.
"I didn't think the Red Crescent was successful enough in giving away tents. There is a problem on that matter," Huseyin Celik, deputy chairman of the ruling AK Party, told the CNN Turk news channel. "I apologize to our people."
Soon after, the relief agency's chairman told the news channel that 12,000 more tents would be delivered to Van on Tuesday. Deputy Prime Minister Besir Atalay, overseeing relief operations in Van, promised: "From today there will be nothing our people lack."
GHOST TOWN
Whatever the shortcomings of the relief operation, the disaster posed little risk to Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan who secured a third consecutive term with a strong majority at a national election in June.
The trauma of quake is one more curse to bear for Kurds, the dominant ethnic group in southeast Turkey, where a three-decade-long separatist insurgency has stolen the lives of more than 40,000 people.
"We escaped from terrorism but now we are faced with an earthquake," said Osman Bayram, a 26-year-old teacher, who had move to Van from a more restive part of the southeast.
The center or Van, a city of 1 million people, resembled a ghost town with no lights in the streets or buildings, and hardly any people in the street.
The sense of dislocation was greater in Ercis. With no homes to return to, thousands of people, mostly men, paced the streets, stopping to look at the destruction or whenever there was some commotion at a rescue operation site.
At one collapsed building on the main road leading through Ercis, the area worst hit in Sunday's quake, exhausted rescue workers shouted at crowds of men pushing forward to catch a glimpse as workers tried to free the corpse of a dead woman from the rubble.
"Get back! Are you not human? Show some respect! Do we not have any honor or pride?" one rescue worker yelled out.
Aftershocks, some powerful, continued to rock the town, causing brief panic on the streets as people jump to their feet to find an open space, scared a building might collapse on them.
The groaning of flexing glass in shop front windows could be heard as the aftershocks struck. In one deserted shop, wooden crates filled with lemons and pomegranates sat stacked in display behind the broken glass.
(Additional reporting by Seda Sezer and Ece Toksabay; Writing by Simon Cameron-Moore; Editing by Michael Roddy)
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