Bangkok Post

Many refugees shun Europe for hopes of a peaceful homeland

- FULYA OZERKAN

Mohammed, 22, has lived in Turkey for four years since fleeing Syria, just months after the civil war that has torn his homeland apart erupted.

But unlike hundreds of thousands of others who this year crossed the Aegean Sea in search of better lives in Europe, he has no plans to leave.

“I have no dreams of going to Europe,” Mohammed, from the Syrian coastal region of Latakia, said in the Osmaniye refugee camp in southern Turkey.

“I will continue my education with God’s permission and start a life here before returning to Syria once the war is over,” added Mohammed, whose own relatives left and went to Belgium.

Mohammed attended Turkish language classes and was found eligible in 2013 to attend university in the southeaste­rn city of Mardin. He says he now wants to graduate and build a new life in Turkey.

The European Union wants to see more cases like Mohammed — people who find the right conditions to live in Turkey rather than travelling to Europe, and want to return to Syria when the time is right.

Grappling with the influx of migrants, Brussels struck a deal in November with Ankara for Turkey to help stem the flow of migrants in return for 3 billion euros (117 billion baht) in aid for Syrian refugees.

Yesterday, German Chancellor Angela Merkel was to lead a meeting on the migrant crisis, Europe’s worst since World War II, of eight European states and Turkey.

Turkey is home to at least 2.2 million Syrian refugees after President Recep Tayyip Erdogan declared an open door policy at the onset of the war.

But it has long complained of being given next to no financial help to look after them, despite spending some US$8 billion (2.88 billion baht) itself.

The EU ambassador to Turkey, Hansjorg Haber, who reporters accompanie­d on a visit to the Osmaniye camp, said there would be a new focus with the injection of fresh funds under the Ankara-Brussels deal.

“I think we have to rely on two things. One is making staying in Turkey more attractive” for the Syrian refugees in the country.

“And the other is that we have to suppress human traffickin­g at the border with the help of Turkish police,” he said.

Only around 260,000 Syrians stay in camps near the border, with the vast majority scattered throughout the country including big cities like Istanbul.

Refugees in camps have access to basic services like education and healthcare. But many families bank on young men working outside to earn a living and many youths work as cheap labourers for well below the average wage.

“We cannot survive without working outside,” said 35-year-old Azimet Tusuz, carefully examining the prices of different brands of cooking oil at the supermarke­t.

Education is one of the main challenges. In September, the Turkish government promised to double the number of Syrian refugees at school, from the current 230,000.

“It is an ambitious one. We are working very closely with the Education Ministry to make sure this target is realised,” Philippe Duamelle, Turkey representa­tive for the UN Children’s Fund (Unicef ), said.

He said Unicef faced a double challenge to keep up standards in the widelyprai­sed camps and to look after the more than 85% of the refugees living outside the camps.

“Therefore, there’s a need to scale up the services for both.”

Adding to the challenge, some 150,000 Syrian children have been born in Turkey since the start of the crisis.

Maha Abdullah, 38, waiting for her 12-year-old daughter at a training centre for Syrian girls in the city of Sanliurfa, said earning a living was a priority.

“We have no problem with schools,” she said. “But rent, electricit­y, water bills are the biggest problem.”

The World Food Programme (WFP), which has rolled out electronic vouchers for Syrian refugees to shop at supermarke­ts, is hoping to utilise more funds after the Ankara-Brussels agreement to reach out to the most vulnerable Syrians living outside the camps.

“If we cannot provide them with minimum assistance they might be likely to move again. We are not politician­s. It’s not our job to stop migration,” WFP’s Turkey representa­tive Jean-Yves Lequime said.

Some refugees are angry with their fellow citizens who risked their lives to go to Europe.

“People are dying to go to Europe, while some are dying for their homeland in Syria. I don’t want to go to Europe. There’s nothing like your homeland,” Ahlem Hanefi, 33, said at the Osmaniye camp.

I will continue my education with God’s permission and start a life here before returning to Syria once the war is over.

 ?? AFP ?? A Syrian child at a refugee camp in Osmaniye. Turkey is home to at least 2.2 million Syrian refugees after President Recep Tayyip Erdogan declared an open door policy at the onset of the Syrian crisis. Education is one of the main challenges.
AFP A Syrian child at a refugee camp in Osmaniye. Turkey is home to at least 2.2 million Syrian refugees after President Recep Tayyip Erdogan declared an open door policy at the onset of the Syrian crisis. Education is one of the main challenges.

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