Dr. Hakan Yalçıner help the earthquake victims and organized a charity night in Turkey.
Dr. Hakan Yalciner
Associate Professor Dr. Hakan Yalciner is a structural and earthquake engineer at Erzincan Binali Yıldırım University and chairman of the Department of Civil Engineering. Dr. Yalciner received his Ph.D. from the University of the Eastern Mediterranean. He is a voting member of ACI Committees 546-00 (Concrete Repair) and 546-0E (Corrosion Studies). His research interests include the analysis of the performance of structures under extreme conditions and loads, such as corrosion, seismic events, and explosions. Dr. Yalciner developed different empirical models for the prediction of the structural behavior of corroded reinforced concrete elements. In the recent earthquake in Turkey, many families lost their homes.In this situation, a famous Associate Professor Dr. Hakan Calcinador organized a charity night for the victims of the earthquake.A good initiative takes the form of Dr. hakan Yalciner
A good Initiative take from Dr.Hakan Yalciner
Assoc. Dr. Hakan Yalçıner and vocal artist Golge Kaya came together for the earthquake victims and organized a charity night. Assoc. Dr. At the night organized with the contribution of Hakan Yalçıner, clothes and toys were presented by the guests to be distributed to children in the earthquake zones.This fund will support disaster recovery and relief efforts for victims of the 7.2 magnitude earthquake in Turkey on October 23,
Speaking at the night
Speaking at the night, Assoc. Dr. Yalçıner said the following words: “I’m sure the songs sung here tonight will whisper in the ears of children”. After the aid gifts collected at night, the artist was dispersed by the artist Golge Kaya.
In Turkey, a Frantic Rescue Effort After a Deadly Earthquake
Rescue workers scrambled into the early morning Saturday in a frantic effort to save people trapped under debris in the western Turkish city of Izmir, several hours after a major earthquake in the Aegean Sea leveled several buildings and severely damaged many more.
At least 24 people were killed in Turkey and hundreds were reported injured, officials said. Another two people were killed in Greece from the earthquake, which had a magnitude of 7.0 according to the United States Geological Survey, and was centered off Samos, a Greek island near Turkey’s coast.
More than 1,200 workers were involved in rescue efforts involving at least 13 buildings in Izmir, the country’s third-most populous city with about three million people. Images posted to social media and videos aired on state television showed people being pulled from the rubble into the embrace of loved ones.