<p>Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan admitted for the first time Friday that his government's search and rescue effort from this week's devastating earthquake was not going as quickly as hoped.</p>.<p>Erdogan has faced criticism from the quake's survivors about an insufficient number of rescuers and humanitarian aid being delivered in the first days of Turkey's biggest disaster in nearly a century.</p>.<p>The death toll from Monday's 7.8-magnitude tremor has surpassed 22,000 across southeastern Turkey and parts of Syria.</p>.<p>Nearly 19,000 of those deaths happened in Turkey.</p>.<p>Erdogan repeated an earlier admission that there had been "shortcomings" in his government's response.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/turkey-syria-quake-toll-nears-20000-as-hopes-dim-1189420.html" target="_blank">Turkey-Syria quake toll nears 20,000 as hopes dim </a></strong></p>.<p>But he appeared to go one step further by conceding that his teams could have responded more quickly.</p>.<p>"So many buildings were damaged that unfortunately, we were not able to speed up our interventions as quickly as we had desired," Erdogan said during a visit to the hard-hit southern city of Adiyaman.</p>.<p>He added that Turkey had now gathered "perhaps the world's largest search and rescue team" comprised of 141,000 across 10 affected provinces.</p>.<p>He also fired back at his critics heading into a crunch election the government plans for May 14.</p>.<p>Erdogan called out "opportunists who want to turn this pain into their political gain".</p>.<p>bg/zak/raz/jmm</p>
<p>Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan admitted for the first time Friday that his government's search and rescue effort from this week's devastating earthquake was not going as quickly as hoped.</p>.<p>Erdogan has faced criticism from the quake's survivors about an insufficient number of rescuers and humanitarian aid being delivered in the first days of Turkey's biggest disaster in nearly a century.</p>.<p>The death toll from Monday's 7.8-magnitude tremor has surpassed 22,000 across southeastern Turkey and parts of Syria.</p>.<p>Nearly 19,000 of those deaths happened in Turkey.</p>.<p>Erdogan repeated an earlier admission that there had been "shortcomings" in his government's response.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/turkey-syria-quake-toll-nears-20000-as-hopes-dim-1189420.html" target="_blank">Turkey-Syria quake toll nears 20,000 as hopes dim </a></strong></p>.<p>But he appeared to go one step further by conceding that his teams could have responded more quickly.</p>.<p>"So many buildings were damaged that unfortunately, we were not able to speed up our interventions as quickly as we had desired," Erdogan said during a visit to the hard-hit southern city of Adiyaman.</p>.<p>He added that Turkey had now gathered "perhaps the world's largest search and rescue team" comprised of 141,000 across 10 affected provinces.</p>.<p>He also fired back at his critics heading into a crunch election the government plans for May 14.</p>.<p>Erdogan called out "opportunists who want to turn this pain into their political gain".</p>.<p>bg/zak/raz/jmm</p>