Rescuers say the chance of finding anyone else alive is diminishing
Authorities on Thursday raised to 523 the death toll from a major earthquake that hit eastern Turkey.
The prime ministry's emergency unit said 185 people had been pulled from the wreckage
as of Thursday morning, while 1,650 people were wounded in the quake that was centreed on the province of Van.
Turkey has appealed for international aid as it battles to help thousands left homeless in the east of the country by Sunday's earthquake, as Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the prime minister, admitted that the government'sresponse to the crisis had been inadequate.
Emergency workers continued to search for survivors on Wednesday in the devastated town of Ercis, rescuing a 27-year-old woman from a collapsed building, after nearly three days buried under rubble.
The woman, Gozde Bahar, a teacher, went into cardiac arrest en route to hospital after her rescue and remains in a critical condition.
As hopes faded for those still missing and attention turned to relief efforts, Erdogan acknowledged that the government had been slow to respond after the earthquake struck.
"We admit that we failed in the beginning, within the first 24 hours. We acknowledge flaws but these mistakes are pretty normal in such incidents," Erdogan said.
Turkey's government's has now approached 30 countries, including Israel, that have offered help and formally requested temporary housing and emergency materials for the region's thousands of homeless.
A Ukrainian plane landed in Erzurum airport on Wednesday evening, bringing aid supplies, Anatolia news agency reported. Planes carrying aid from France and Italy were also expected to land in Erzurum, it said.
Responding to a request for help from Ankara, Israel said it planned to deliver a small number of prefabricated homes by air and said it could ship hundreds more by sea.
Israel's offer of help was a purely humanitarian gesture, an Israeli defence ministry spokesman said, playing down the recent diplomatic tensions between the two countries.
Erdogan pledged to build a new city in Van, the provincial capital devastated by the quake, as well as a new town in Ercis.
The governor of Van province said 3,000 buildings had collapsed or were made useless. He estimated that 600,000 people had been "affected" by the quake, but not all needed temporary accommodation. The exact number of homeless was unclear.
"Some residents with no damage in their homes are unable to go back because of the aftershocks. That is why everyone wants tents," Munir Karaloglu said.
Complaints over the lack of tents have grown louder with each passing day, and some desperate survivors fought among themselves to try and grab tents being distributed by relief workers from the back of a lorry.
The Turkish Red Crescent has been struggling to deliver fast enough to provide shelter for victims of the quake shivering in freezing temperatures at night.
"There is absolutely no co-ordination, you have to step on people to get a tent," Suleyman Akbulut, an 18-year-old jobless man, said.
Speaking to Al Jazeera's Anita McNaught in Ercis, army personnel said they had been "working around the clock, forgoing sleep and regular meals to make sure the job gets done," our correspondent said.
But there were only 150 soldiers stationed there and not nearly enough to control the crowds if the locals "decided to take over," McNaught said.
But while a sense of order had been preserved in the town centre, that was not the case everywhere.
Our correspondent said some army trucks had been stopped by locals and relieved of their aid because many had grown impatient and desperate.
The lack of efficiency in delivering aid has essentially created a black market for white tents, McNaught reported.
An official for the Turkish Red Crescent told the AFP news agency that 17 aid trucks had been looted in Ercis and Van city.
Sunday's 7.2-magnitude quake was Turkey's most powerful since a pair of earthquakes in 1999 in north-western Turkey killed more than 20,000 people.
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