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Nightmare In Turkey

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  • Nightmare In Turkey

    NIGHTMARE IN TURKEY
    Marta Hepler Drahos

    The Record-Eagle
    Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Business News
    April 13, 2009 Monday
    Traverse City, Michigan

    Apr. 13--They were on their way to Pamukkale, site of an ancient city
    and natural wonder: a miles-wide calcium formation dubbed "cotton
    castle" for its dazzling white color.

    The trip was part of a much-needed vacation on the Turkish Riviera,
    roughly 1,400 miles from their home in Germany. But their perfect
    getaway turned into a nightmare when the tourist bus in which they were
    riding overturned on its way to the World Heritage site, ostensibly
    because of rain.

    Now our friends are stranded in a Turkish hospital, one of them in
    critical condition with collapsed and lacerated lungs, while their
    children wait and worry and try to hold their lives together back home.

    Their story actually begins on Christmas Eve, when the matriarch of
    the family suddenly became ill. It was the start of a long ordeal
    that would involve surgery, treatment, recovery and more surgery for
    a serious infection surrounding her artificial knee.

    Three months after it began, she was recovering well enough that
    our friends could take a well-deserved respite on the Mediterranean,
    leaving their daughter, who had just returned from a law internship
    at the European Parliament in Brussels, in charge at home.

    With its warm climate, seaside resorts and hundreds of archaeological
    and historical sites, Turkey has become a popular destination for
    European tourists, often competing with Greece, Italy and Spain.

    Most tour the country by bus, the easiest, cheapest and most popular
    way to travel in Turkey, as evidenced by the mammoth Istanbul
    International Bus Terminal with its 168 ticket offices and boarding
    gates, Metro station, hotel, restaurants and shopping centers.

    But poor road conditions, overworked drivers and a lack of safety
    regulations, among other factors, have led to frequent road crashes
    in the country.

    In May 2005 one Russian died and 36 were wounded, four of them
    seriously, when their tourist bus overturned on its way from Pamukkale
    to Antalya, a resort city on the Mediterranean coast. In July 2007,
    18 more Russian tourists were injured on their way to Antalya when
    their bus flipped over on a mountain highway.

    In May 2008, four Polish tourists were injured when the bus they were
    riding in hit a barrier on the highway (the Polish consul in Turkey
    said the road where the accident took place is called "the road of
    death" by the Turks). Four months later, 16 Iranian Armenian tourists
    were killed and 32 injured when their bus careered off a bendy road.

    Now our friend is in a coma in a foreign country, while her children
    -- aching to see her -- suffer through their classes back home. Her
    husband spends his days at the hospital, where he's not allowed near
    her bedside, and returns to an empty hotel room at night.

    Thanks to travel insurance, their medical and other expenses will be
    paid. But even if they recover from this accident, nothing can heal
    the emotional scars it's sure to leave behind.
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