Gulf Today

Erdogan vows Turkey will ‘not expel’ Syrian refugees

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ISTANBUL: President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Monday pledged that Turkey would not drive Syrian refugees back to their home country despite pressure from opposition parties.

Turkey is today home to more than 3.6 million Syrian refugees who fled ater civil war broke out in 2011 in its southern neighbour.

Last week, the main opposition CHP leader Kemal Kilicdarog­lu said his party would return Syrian refugees to their homeland within two years if he came to power.

“We will protect up to the end these brothers who fled the war and took refuge in our country” no mater what the CHP leader claims, Erdogan said in a televised address.

“We will never expel them from this land. “Our door is wide open to them. We will continue to host them. We will not throw them into the lap of murderers.” Erdogan is facing rising public anger over the refugees’ and is wary of the issue dominating next year’s presidenti­al elections.

Turkey has welcomed nearly five million refugees in total, including Syrians and Afghans, but their presence has caused tensions with locals, especially as the country is in economic turmoil with the weakening lira and soaring energy and food prices.

Last week, Erdogan said Ankara was aiming to encourage one million refugees to return home by building housing and local infrastruc­ture in Syria.

More Syrian children are in need than at any time since a devastatin­g civil war erupted over a decade ago, but funding for them is “dwindling,” the United Nations warned.

“Syria’s children have suffered for far too long and should not suffer any longer,” the UN children’s agency said in a statement.

A total of 9.3 million Syrian children are in need of aid both inside the country and in the wider region where they have fled, UNICEF spokespers­on Juliete Touma told AFP.

“More than 6.5 million children in Syria are in need of assistance, the highest number recorded since the beginning of the crisis, more than 11 years ago,” the agency statement added.

In neighbouri­ng countries, 2.8 million Syrian refugee children depend on assistance, Touma said.

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