EARTHQUAKE MIRACLE: Moment Two Children And Two Adults Are Pulled Alive From The Rubble

This is the heart-lifting miracle moment four people including two children are pulled alive from the rubble of earthquakes that have left at least 5,000 dead.

Footage shot by rescuers in Turkey shows a young girl blinking in disbelief after she is dragged from under a collapsed building.

Seconds later, a boy – who looks about 11 years old – emerges feet first as the rescuers drag him to safety too.

He is followed quickly by a man, whose rescue is delayed when he gets caught up on pieces of debris.

Finally, a woman is pulled to safety from under the concrete.

The extraordinary rescue is reported to have taken place in the Nizip area in Gaziantep, in southern Turkey, which was hit hard by the quake.

It is not known at this stage if the four are a family.

But all appear to have survived the quake horror virtually unscathed.

Rescuers can be seen battling against sleet and snow apparently without any safety equipment and using their bare hands to free people.

Emergency workers are battling against the clock to save people from the rubble, with the international community sending in numerous experts to assist.

People rescue four people, including two children, under the rubles in Nizip, Gaziantep, Turkey, Monday, Feb. 6, 2023. Thousands of people died and were injured as a result of a massive earthquake in Turkey, Monday, Feb. 6, 2023. (CEN)

Turkey’s Vice President Fuat Oktay said this morning, on Tuesday, 7th February, that the total death toll in Turkey and Syria now exceeds 5,000 people, with 3,419 people dead in Turkey.

The total number of injured at the time of writing was 20,534 in Turkey alone.

The 7.8 magnitude earthquake that struck early on Monday morning in southern Turkey, devastating the south of the country and northern Syria, has been described by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan as one of the worst disasters in decades.

A second earthquake of 7.5 magnitude hit the same region again at noon Monday, causing even more damage.

More than 11,000 buildings have reportedly collapsed in Turkey, with damage and destruction spanning a border region of approximately 650 miles.

Volunteer rescue workers in northern Syria have said that they lack the most basic equipment to rescue those trapped under the rubble of their homes.