Tag: Syrian refugees

  • Female Syrian refugees in Turkey being sold to Arab states: Turkish politician

    Female Syrian refugees in Turkey being sold to Arab states: Turkish politician

    The deputy chairman of the Turkish opposition Republican People’s Party, Faruq Logoglu, says female Syrian refugees in Turkish camps are being sold to rich sheikhs in Arab countries.

    ostovar20130220071407200

    Syrian refugee women and children walk along the fence of their camp on the Syrian border near the east Turkish village of Apaydin, December 12, 2012.

     

     

    Addressing the parliament on Tuesday, the Turkish official criticized the violation of human rights in the refugee camps in Turkey, saying women and girls are being sent to neighboring rich Arab states in exchange for money, Turkish Taraf daily reported on Tuesday.

    He said refugee children from Syria are also being trained to use guns and are sent to Syria to fight against Syrian government forces.

    Turkey is home to 180,000 of the Syrian refugees in camps in the south of the country.

    According to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), 75 percent of the Syrian refugees who have taken shelter in Turkey are women and children.

    The Turkish Republican People’s Party has repeatedly pronounced its opposition to Turkey’s stance on Syria, calling for an end to the Syrian conflict and a diplomatic solution to the ongoing crisis in the country.

    Since the start of the unrest in Syria, Turkey has thrown its weight behind the militants fighting the Syrian government.

    Syria has been experienced unrest for almost two years, which has claimed the lives of many people, including large numbers of security forces.

    The Syrian government says the chaos, which began in the country in March 2011, is being orchestrated from outside and there are reports that a very large number of the armed militants are foreign nationals.

    AO/HJL

    via PressTV – Female Syrian refugees in Turkey being sold to Arab states: Turkish politician.

  • Turkey says has spent $600 million on Syria refugees

    Turkey says has spent $600 million on Syria refugees

    ANKARA | Fri Feb 8, 2013 6:21am EST

    More than 70,000 Syrians are believed to be living in cities across Turkey
    More than 70,000 Syrians are believed to be living in cities across Turkey

    (Reuters) – Turkey has spent more than $600 million sheltering refugees from the almost two-year-old conflict in neighboring Syria, Finance Minister Mehmet Simsek said on Friday.

    Of that total, the central government had spent 610.5 million lira ($344 million) from its budget by February 5, Simsek said on his official Twitter account.

    Local authorities have provided the rest, he added.

    Turkey has been one of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s fiercest critics, hosting a NATO Patriot missile defense system to protect against a spillover of violence and leading calls for international intervention to end the conflict.

    The United Nations said on Friday that refugee numbers have spiked, with around 5,000 people fleeing each day, 2,000 more a day than last year’s figures.

    Turkey is sheltering more than 177,000 refugees in 16 camps, although tens of thousands more Syrians have crossed into Turkey and are staying with relatives or in private accommodation, according to the country’s disaster management agency.

    Government officials complain Turkey has received only around $35 million for its humanitarian assistance from foreign donors, half of that from the United Nations.

    The government is tightly controlling the aid effort, channeling assistance largely through Turkish NGOs in what it says is a bid to ensure it is properly co-ordinated.

    Some diplomats have suggested foreign funding might be more forthcoming if international organizations such as the United Nations were given greater control.

    Turkey’s total central government budget spending was 360 billion lira ($200 billion) last year.

    (Reporting by Orhan Coskun; Writing by Seda Sezer; Editing by Nick Tattersall and Oliver Holmes)

    via Turkey says has spent $600 million on Syria refugees | Reuters.

  • Syrian refugees in Turkey vote for camp leaders in elections touted as practice in democracy – The Washington Post

    Syrian refugees in Turkey vote for camp leaders in elections touted as practice in democracy – The Washington Post

    By Associated Press, Published: January 17

    KILIS, Turkey — Thousands of Syrians in a refugee camp voted Thursday to select camp leaders and administrators in elections the Turkish government has described as a practice for democracy. But with the sound of gunfire reverberating from across the border, gloom reigned in the camp over whether the nearly two-year-old civil war would ebb soon to allow free elections in Syria in the near future.

    About 6,500 refugees at the Oncupinar camp in Turkey’s border province of Kilis cast ballots into clear plastic ballot boxes inside a makeshift school under banners that read: “Syrian citizens elect their own representatives freely.”

    via Syrian refugees in Turkey vote for camp leaders in elections touted as practice in democracy – The Washington Post.

    more:

  • MP takes trip to Turkey, visits refugee camps

    MP takes trip to Turkey, visits refugee camps

    Mississauga-Erindale MP Bob Dechert recently travelled to Turkey to meet with religious leaders and visit two Syrian refugee camps.

    Dechert in Turkey. Mississauga-Erindale MP Bob Dechert (left) and Minister of Citizenship and Immigration Jason Kenney visit a Syrian refugee camp in Turkey. Supplied photo
    Dechert in Turkey. Mississauga-Erindale MP Bob Dechert (left) and Minister of Citizenship and Immigration Jason Kenney visit a Syrian refugee camp in Turkey. Supplied photo

    Dechert, who also serves as parliamentary secretary to the minister of foreign affairs, joined Minister of Citizenship and Immigration Jason Kenney in meetings with Turkey’s chief rabbi, Rav Isak Haleva. He leads the 25,000 members of the Jewish community across the country.

    “It was an honour to be able to meet with such important and influential spiritual leaders in the region,” said Dechert in a release. “Our meetings in Turkey allowed us to demonstrate our government’s foreign policy emphasis on the protection and promotion of freedom, democracy, human rights and the rule of law around the world.”

    Dechert also visited two Syrian refugee camps on his trip.

    “As the violence in Syria continues, the government of Turkey is doing a commendable job to help those who have been forced to flee their homes,” said Dechert. “I’m glad that I was able to see firsthand the work that is being done in Turkey and I’m also proud that our government has helped assist, through contributions to the Turkish Red Crescent, these meaningful and necessary projects.”

    via Mississauga Article: MP takes trip to Turkey, visits refugee camps.

  • On visit to region, UN official praises Turkey for support to Syrian refugees

    On visit to region, UN official praises Turkey for support to Syrian refugees

    15 January 2013 – The head of the United Nations food relief agency today expressed her gratitude to the people and Government of Turkey for their support of Syrians seeking refuge from the continuing violence affecting their country.

    04-25-2012earthartincousins

    “It’s because of the compassionate response of the Turkish people and World Food Programme’s (WFP) strong partnership with the Government of Turkey that we have been able to rise to the challenge of assisting so many Syrians in need of food assistance during this ongoing humanitarian crisis,” said WFP’s Executive Director, Ertharin Cousin, in a news release.

    Her comments came at the end of a three-day trip to the country during which she met with Turkish officials in Ankara and Istanbul followed by a visit to the Kilis refugee camp – the first of its kind in the country – situated along the Turkish-Syrian border.

    Accompanied by the Turkish Minister of Economy and other high-level government officials, Ms. Cousin met with Syrian refugees in Kilis, listening to their accounts of the deteriorating humanitarian situation in Syria that forced them to flee.

    According to a recent update released by the UN High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR), the past two weeks have seen 3,266 Syrians admitted to Turkey from the borders as the Syrian conflict has continued to escalate. Now in its 23rd month, the violence has claimed more than 60,000 lives, mostly civilian, while hundreds of thousands of Syrians have been displaced.

    “These families have gone through very difficult moments, losing their loved ones and worrying about the people and homes they left behind,” Ms. Cousin said.

    “We have a commitment to continue to support Syrian refugees – whether in Turkey or in the other neighbouring countries – with some of them in very precarious conditions this winter,” she added, referring to the harsh weather conditions which have further exacerbated the living conditions for refugees in the region.

    During her visit, the WFP chief also stopped at one of the camp’s supermarkets and met women using their WFP-sponsored electronic food cards to purchase fresh food for their families.

    The voucher system – which the UN agency plans to expand to assist a further 100,000 Syrian refugees in Turkey by June 2013 – allows refugees to shop for the food they want and prepare it to their liking.

    In addition to Turkey, Syrians are also taking refuge in Jordan, Iraq, Lebanon and Egypt. The UN estimates that up to a million Syrian refugees will need help during the first half of 2013.

    via United Nations News Centre – On visit to region, UN official praises Turkey for support to Syrian refugees.

  • Syrian refugees slipping into Turkey

    Syrian refugees slipping into Turkey

    By James Reynolds BBC News, Ceylanpinar, Turkey-Syria border

    64292813 fence

    A Syrian refugee ducks wire on the border with Turkey Some Syrians prefer to cross the border unofficially

    From the edges of southern Turkey, you can see the smoke of a single cigarette inside Syria. The Turkish town of Ceylanpinar is around 50m away from the Syrian town of Ras al-Ain. The two countries are separated by a barbed wire fence.

    On the Syrian side, two children pick up bullet casings and clink them together. A group of opposition gunmen holds up its rifles and grenades for spectators watching from Turkey.

    For several days earlier this month the Syrian army shelled Ras al-Ain to try to get rid of the rebels. Thousands of the town’s residents fled to Ceylanpinar. Syria’s war is right next door. This makes the Turkish state nervous.

    On the main road facing the border, Turkey has created a small buffer zone with a roll of razor wire. Inside this zone, Turkish soldiers in one-man trenches are positioned every 30m or so.

    The soldiers instruct Syrians who want to cross to walk to a nearby military position. From there, the Turkish authorities will register the new refugees and take them to well-guarded refugee camps inside Turkey.

    But many Syrians thinking of crossing do not want to be confined to official camps. They have noted that the soldiers’ border duties do not appear to include early mornings.

    Burnt houses

    Just before 08:00, three men approach a hole in the border fence opposite a Turkish playground. A friend standing in the playground shouts instructions to them. He tells them to cross. The men duck underneath the razor wire and jog across railway tracks into Turkey.

    Syrian refugee Karim Karim is separated from his family

    One curses the Syrian President, Bashar al-Assad.

    “Bashar forced us to leave. Bashar has no honour.”

    Their friend helps them up a hillside into the small playground guarded by a roll of razor wire.

    “We’ll go back very soon – I swear,” says one of men.

    “People are hungry,” says Ali, one of the three. “There is no bread on the other side. They are sleeping outside. People were killed when they were in their homes.”

    Later in the day, Turkish soldiers arrive to patrol the border fence. A commander fiddling with a packet of cigarettes periodically orders Syrians inside Turkey to keep their distance from the border. On the edges of the small playground, Karim talks to one of his family members on a mobile phone. His daughter clings to his legs.

    “How are things over there?” he asks. “Do you have enough food?”

    Karim managed to escape Ras al-Ain earlier this month when the Syrian army shelled the town. He is now trying to get the rest of his family across.

    “Houses are burned down, they’re destroyed,” he says. “My family needs our help but we’re all afraid of the warplanes flying overhead.”

    No place to go

    Since the Syrian conflict began in March 2011, official figures show that Turkey has taken in more than 100,000 refugees. The Turkish government in Ankara is nervous about the effects of having so many Syrian refugees on its soil.

    BBC map

    But the local Turkish authorities in Ceylanpinar see things differently. This region is mostly Kurdish on both sides of the border. The Kurdish-speaking authorities here are keen to provide help for refugees who speak the same language, and share the same culture.

    A municipal building in Ceylanpinar normally used as a condolence hall has become a canteen and a hotel. Volunteers serve dozens of refugee families a lunch of bread, rice, yoghurt and chicken.

    The children have to make their way through adult-size portions. On a bench in the main hall, there is a bag of second-hand clothes for those who have left everything behind.

    In the courtyard, a middle-aged volunteer wearing a suit dutifully takes his place in a circle of children playing a game. Another volunteer, Ali Kirdar, sits on a bench and rolls a cigarette. He spends his time finding newly escaped refugees and bringing them to the hall.

    “Many of the refugees have no place to go,” he says.

    “So you can find them in nearby parks with their belongings at their feet. They just sit and stare ahead. You can tell that they don’t know anyone and that they need help.”

    Syrian refugees at border with Turkey

    Local discontent

    Not everyone appreciates the new arrivals. At a hairdressers in Ceylanpinar, the barber says that a refugee from Syria recently stole one of the boxes of canaries that he keeps on a ledge above the mirror.

    Behind the barber’s chair, Orhan Guven waits patiently for a haircut. He sent the rest of his family away from this area – after bullets from Syria hit their house.

    “A piece of shrapnel grazed my grandmother as she was sitting in our courtyard,” he recalls.

    “The government has evacuated nearby villages but there are houses here only 30m from the border which have not been evacuated. We are left on our own – that’s how we feel.”

    The Turkish military wants to keep the border quiet. Throughout the day soldiers try to break up crowds of Syrians shouting to their friends across the border. A water cannon is deployed to get the crowd to disperse.

    The Turkish state may host tens of thousands of Syrian refugees, but it does not want them to make too much noise.

    via BBC News – Syrian refugees slipping into Turkey.