KOTA KINABALU: An army Royal Medical Corps team will be deployed to Turkiye early tomorrow morning to set up a field hospital, following the earthquake that hit the country three days ago, said Defence Minister Datuk Seri Mohamad Hasan.
He said 106 personnel, including 41 doctors, would be sent to Turkiye, along with equipment of three mobile halls used for emergencies and one mobile operating theatre.
"The armed forces has received an application from the National Disaster Management Agency (Nadma) regarding the issue (field hospital). After consulting with the Turkish Embassy in Kuala Lumpur, we decided to move the team.
"The field hospital will operate for six weeks," he said after visiting the Lok Kawi Camp (5th Brigade headquarters) here today.
He said hospital equipment would be delivered in stages and the field hospital was the same as the facility established by the armed forces during the peak of the Covid-19 pandemic.
Mohamad said his ministry still did not know the location of the field hospital because the disaster involved a large area, and would leave it to the Turkish government to determine its appropriate location.
"What is important is that we want all the teams sent there to be able to complete the mission safely. We know that there will be aftershocks, so they have to be careful," he added.
Commenting on his working visit to Sabah, Mohamad said it was to inspect the facilities of the army camp on the west coast of Sabah and to examine the state of operation and readiness of military and Defence Ministry employees.
"I have visited the Eastern Fleet (TLDM) base in Sepanggar and I am satisfied with their operations. The base is relatively new and there are no problems in terms of buildings, however, there is a slight delay in the allocation to maintain the assets and we will resolve that immediately.
"I also visited the Lok Kawi Camp and we are aware that this camp has been around for a long time and that many problems have arisen especially infrastructure. So we will try to upgrade anything that is worn out because we want the personnel on duty to be comfortable," he said.
He had also asked the camp to prepare a working paper for the purpose of relocating the clinic within the camp area.
"The clinic is flooded with every heavy rainfall, therefore it will be moved to an existing building that is vacant, but we want to see a working paper first and I think the ministry has no problem with the matter (of relocation)," he said. - BERNAMA