<p>Rescuers working by torchlight pulled three-year-old Tariq Haidar from the rubble some 42 hours after a devastating earthquake destroyed his family home in the Syrian town of Jandaris. His family couldn't be saved.</p>.<p>Orphaned by the earthquake that hit Syria and Turkey in the dead of night on Monday, Haidar was brought to a hospital where doctors were forced to amputate his left leg. They are trying to save his right.</p>.<p>"As soon as he woke up, and saw us in front of him, he asked: 'Where is Miral?'. We asked 'Who is Miral?'. He said: 'My sister, she was sleeping next to me but she wasn't answering me'," said Malek Qasida, a nurse caring for him.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/no-change-in-approach-to-syria-govt-after-earthquake-france-1189597.html" target="_blank">No change in approach to Syria govt after earthquake: France</a></strong></p>.<p>"They pulled out his father and two of his siblings before him, dead," added Qasida, speaking at the hospital where Haidar was in intensive care, his amputated leg heavily bandaged.</p>.<p>The bodies of his mother and a third sibling were recovered from the rubble later, people in the area said. His removal from the wreckage was the latest in a series of eye-catching rescues caught on camera in the areas in Syria and Turkey hit by the earthquake.</p>.<p>Jandaris was severely damaged by the quake, which has killed at least 1,930 people in rebel-held northwestern Syria, according to rescue workers. The Syrian government says the toll in its part of the fractured country is 1,347.</p>.<p>The death toll in Turkey rose to 16,170 on Thursday.</p>.<p>The Syrian civil defence, the rescue service in the northwest, said on Thursday many families remain under the rubble.</p>.<p>Qasida said: "There are hundreds of children still under the rubble."</p>
<p>Rescuers working by torchlight pulled three-year-old Tariq Haidar from the rubble some 42 hours after a devastating earthquake destroyed his family home in the Syrian town of Jandaris. His family couldn't be saved.</p>.<p>Orphaned by the earthquake that hit Syria and Turkey in the dead of night on Monday, Haidar was brought to a hospital where doctors were forced to amputate his left leg. They are trying to save his right.</p>.<p>"As soon as he woke up, and saw us in front of him, he asked: 'Where is Miral?'. We asked 'Who is Miral?'. He said: 'My sister, she was sleeping next to me but she wasn't answering me'," said Malek Qasida, a nurse caring for him.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/no-change-in-approach-to-syria-govt-after-earthquake-france-1189597.html" target="_blank">No change in approach to Syria govt after earthquake: France</a></strong></p>.<p>"They pulled out his father and two of his siblings before him, dead," added Qasida, speaking at the hospital where Haidar was in intensive care, his amputated leg heavily bandaged.</p>.<p>The bodies of his mother and a third sibling were recovered from the rubble later, people in the area said. His removal from the wreckage was the latest in a series of eye-catching rescues caught on camera in the areas in Syria and Turkey hit by the earthquake.</p>.<p>Jandaris was severely damaged by the quake, which has killed at least 1,930 people in rebel-held northwestern Syria, according to rescue workers. The Syrian government says the toll in its part of the fractured country is 1,347.</p>.<p>The death toll in Turkey rose to 16,170 on Thursday.</p>.<p>The Syrian civil defence, the rescue service in the northwest, said on Thursday many families remain under the rubble.</p>.<p>Qasida said: "There are hundreds of children still under the rubble."</p>