<p>Nothing is ever deleted or forgotten on the internet.</p>.<p>Turkish officials learned that the hard way when grieving users began sharing old tweets and videos embarrassing for the government after last week's disastrous earthquake.</p>.<p>One clip shows President Recep Tayyip Erdogan congratulating officials for adopting an amnesty law in 2018 forgiving faults in nearly six million buildings that failed safety regulations.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/turkey-quake-fuels-conspiracy-posts-on-us-antenna-station-1192565.html">Turkey quake fuels conspiracy posts on US antenna station</a></strong></p>.<p>Filmed during rallies in Hatay, Kahramanmaras and Malatya -- all areas badly affected by the February 6 disaster -- Erdogan boasted that he had "solved the problem" for residents to stay in their homes.</p>.<p>Erdogan's popularity over his two-decade rule rested on his ability to create an affluent new middle class and modern, affordable housing in an underdeveloped region.</p>.<p>But those comments, while well-received by people who avoided losing their homes at the time, now look ill-conceived.</p>.<p>Experts say that contractors' failure to comply with building codes in the earthquake-prone region explain the huge death toll, which has climbed above 38,000 in Turkey and approached 3,700 in Syria.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/who-seeks-845-million-for-earthquake-response-in-turkey-syria-1192477.html" target="_blank">WHO seeks $84.5 million for earthquake response in Turkey, Syria</a></strong></p>.<p>"Buildings kill people, not earthquakes. We must learn to live with earthquakes... and take measures accordingly," Erdogan tweeted in 2013, when he was prime minister.</p>.<p>That tweet has now been shared thousands of times.</p>.<p>In another viral video from 2011, former finance minister Mehmet Simsek explained that a special "earthquake tax" introduced after the 1999 quake that killed around 17,000 people in northwestern Turkey was used to pay for roads and hospitals.</p>.<p>The tax was intended to prepare cities to better withstand earthquakes.</p>.<p>A popular Twitter account, @ArsivUnutmaz, with 720,000 followers, has posted more than 50 similar videos, photos, and old documents since the tremor.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/young-woman-rescued-from-rubble-248-hours-after-earthquake-1191818.html" target="_blank">Young woman rescued from rubble 248 hours after earthquake</a></strong></p>.<p>Many have been shared tens of thousands of times and received millions of views.</p>.<p>"We have seen many similar Twitter accounts created since the mid-2010s because, after the 2016 coup attempt, the government tried to reset the collective memory," said Sarphan Uzunoglu, communications professor at Istanbul's Bilgi University.</p>.<p>Following a media crackdown, "newspapers destroyed their archives to remove certain words they used in the past and that they now consider improper", Uzunoglu added.</p>.<p>Erdogan unleashed a sweeping crackdown after the 2016 failed coup that placed much of the media under the government's and its business allies' control.</p>.<p>Opposition and independent media have published images and reports damaging for the government, but these never make it on Turkish television news.</p>.<p>Mainstream channels broadcast a continuous loop of rescue footage in the first 10 days.</p>.<p>This is because of self-censorship, said Uzunoglu.</p>.<p>Turkey in October passed a law punishing the dissemination of "fake news" by up to three years in prison.</p>.<p>According to Reporters Without Borders, Turkey ranked 149 out of 180 for press freedom in 2022.</p>.<p>"All possible means are used to undermine critics," RSF said.</p>.<p>But it is not easy for officials to keep users from sharing archive images.</p>.<p>"These types of accounts can be created again and again," Uzunoglu said, adding that he believed some of them are fed by Erdogan's opponents -- including those in exile.</p>.<p>One viral video from 2019 showed Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu conducting an earthquake simulation exercise for Kahramanmaras residents.</p>.<p>The clip showed a damaged building in one shot, with a sign nearby saying Saffron Hotel.</p>.<p>Reality sadly caught up with fiction: an eight-storey hotel named Saffron in Kahramanmaras collapsed on February 6.</p>
<p>Nothing is ever deleted or forgotten on the internet.</p>.<p>Turkish officials learned that the hard way when grieving users began sharing old tweets and videos embarrassing for the government after last week's disastrous earthquake.</p>.<p>One clip shows President Recep Tayyip Erdogan congratulating officials for adopting an amnesty law in 2018 forgiving faults in nearly six million buildings that failed safety regulations.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/turkey-quake-fuels-conspiracy-posts-on-us-antenna-station-1192565.html">Turkey quake fuels conspiracy posts on US antenna station</a></strong></p>.<p>Filmed during rallies in Hatay, Kahramanmaras and Malatya -- all areas badly affected by the February 6 disaster -- Erdogan boasted that he had "solved the problem" for residents to stay in their homes.</p>.<p>Erdogan's popularity over his two-decade rule rested on his ability to create an affluent new middle class and modern, affordable housing in an underdeveloped region.</p>.<p>But those comments, while well-received by people who avoided losing their homes at the time, now look ill-conceived.</p>.<p>Experts say that contractors' failure to comply with building codes in the earthquake-prone region explain the huge death toll, which has climbed above 38,000 in Turkey and approached 3,700 in Syria.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/who-seeks-845-million-for-earthquake-response-in-turkey-syria-1192477.html" target="_blank">WHO seeks $84.5 million for earthquake response in Turkey, Syria</a></strong></p>.<p>"Buildings kill people, not earthquakes. We must learn to live with earthquakes... and take measures accordingly," Erdogan tweeted in 2013, when he was prime minister.</p>.<p>That tweet has now been shared thousands of times.</p>.<p>In another viral video from 2011, former finance minister Mehmet Simsek explained that a special "earthquake tax" introduced after the 1999 quake that killed around 17,000 people in northwestern Turkey was used to pay for roads and hospitals.</p>.<p>The tax was intended to prepare cities to better withstand earthquakes.</p>.<p>A popular Twitter account, @ArsivUnutmaz, with 720,000 followers, has posted more than 50 similar videos, photos, and old documents since the tremor.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/young-woman-rescued-from-rubble-248-hours-after-earthquake-1191818.html" target="_blank">Young woman rescued from rubble 248 hours after earthquake</a></strong></p>.<p>Many have been shared tens of thousands of times and received millions of views.</p>.<p>"We have seen many similar Twitter accounts created since the mid-2010s because, after the 2016 coup attempt, the government tried to reset the collective memory," said Sarphan Uzunoglu, communications professor at Istanbul's Bilgi University.</p>.<p>Following a media crackdown, "newspapers destroyed their archives to remove certain words they used in the past and that they now consider improper", Uzunoglu added.</p>.<p>Erdogan unleashed a sweeping crackdown after the 2016 failed coup that placed much of the media under the government's and its business allies' control.</p>.<p>Opposition and independent media have published images and reports damaging for the government, but these never make it on Turkish television news.</p>.<p>Mainstream channels broadcast a continuous loop of rescue footage in the first 10 days.</p>.<p>This is because of self-censorship, said Uzunoglu.</p>.<p>Turkey in October passed a law punishing the dissemination of "fake news" by up to three years in prison.</p>.<p>According to Reporters Without Borders, Turkey ranked 149 out of 180 for press freedom in 2022.</p>.<p>"All possible means are used to undermine critics," RSF said.</p>.<p>But it is not easy for officials to keep users from sharing archive images.</p>.<p>"These types of accounts can be created again and again," Uzunoglu said, adding that he believed some of them are fed by Erdogan's opponents -- including those in exile.</p>.<p>One viral video from 2019 showed Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu conducting an earthquake simulation exercise for Kahramanmaras residents.</p>.<p>The clip showed a damaged building in one shot, with a sign nearby saying Saffron Hotel.</p>.<p>Reality sadly caught up with fiction: an eight-storey hotel named Saffron in Kahramanmaras collapsed on February 6.</p>