Hero's welcome for B.C. search-and-rescue team returning from quake-ravaged Turkey

Akif Asilturk, 9, was among the many on hand to greet the Burnaby Urban Search and Rescue Team as they arrived. (Dan Burritt/CBC - image credit)
Akif Asilturk, 9, was among the many on hand to greet the Burnaby Urban Search and Rescue Team as they arrived. (Dan Burritt/CBC - image credit)

Cheers and tears greeted returning members of Burnaby's Urban Search and Rescue Team, fresh from a harrowing effort to save lives in Turkey after the devastating earthquakes.

A crowd of dozens, largely made up of Turkish Canadians, welcomed them at Vancouver International Airport Tuesday after the team spent a week aiding the shattered nation.

"I am here to thank them and welcome them and just to show my appreciation as a proud Canadian," said Yusuf Gorgec. "They went and tried to rescue … my home people where I was born."

Team member Shawn Mohammed said he and his colleagues were humbled by the outpouring of thanks.

Dan Burritt/CBC
Dan Burritt/CBC

"Our mission from when we hit the ground was focused on looking for viable victims and helping families reunite," Mohammed said. "So it's nice to see that they're happy."

The 10-person Burnaby Urban Search and Rescue team, comprised of mostly first responders from the city's fire department, flew to Turkey with the blessing of the country's government.

The team deployed days after quakes hit Turkey and Syria on Feb. 6, killing more than 35,000 people and levelling thousands of buildings.

Dan Burritt/CBC
Dan Burritt/CBC

'Such a highly skilled team'

Sean's wife, Christina Mohammed and their three children were on hand to greet him.

Christina said she wasn't worried because "they are part of such a highly skilled team and many of them had been deployed before together, and so you just trust that they're safe, they're taking care of each other, and they're there to do good work.

"It was hard not knowing where they were, but it was nice to see his face on TV when they were rescuing the lady," she said.The team said they picked a woman out of the rubble and she suffered minor kidney damage but is "resting comfortably" following her rescue.

Also at YVR Tuesday was Nural Sümbültepe, a Richmond, B.C., teacher from Turkey who has lost at least six immediate family members in the tragedy.

Dan Burritt/CBC
Dan Burritt/CBC

"All I'm thinking about is the children who are trapped at home or in tents," Sümbültepe said.

She said she's deeply appreciative of the team's efforts and would like to invite them to speak to her class in the future.

Norm MacLeod, a deputy chief with the White Rock Fire Department who led the team in Turkey, said he's grateful to be home after being surprised by the scale of the devastation.

MacLeod said his team had honed its skills in Nepal in 2015, a "disaster in its own right,'' saying that the destruction in Turkey was "much larger'' in scale.

The Canadian government pledged $10 million in aid soon after the quakes, and collection campaigns for food, clothing, and monetary donations soon popped up in multiple Canadian cities.