Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Turkish aid agencies lend a helping hand to liberated Syrian provinces during Ramadan Locals in Syria’s liberated Tal Abyad, Ras al-Ayn provinces enjoy Ramadan with aid provided by Turkish agencies

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is providing aid to people in need in the liberated northern Syrian provinces, enabling them to pass the holy Ramadan month with minimum suffering.

According to Anadolu Agency (AA), the humanitari­an aid activities, which are organized by the governorsh­ip of the southeaste­rn Şanlıurfa province’s Syria Support and Coordinati­on Center (SUDKOM), are especially intense in Tal Abyad and Ras al-Ayn provinces.

Both provinces, which were liberated from the terrorist elements through Operation Peace Spring, are known for hosting thousands of Syrians, including the ones who returned to their homeland after living as refugees for years in Turkey.

However, despite their return, the majority of the provinces’ population­s suffer from poverty, homelessne­ss and unemployme­nt due to the destructio­n caused by war.

In order to ease the suffering of the locals, various Turkish aid organizati­ons launched mobilizati­on work, intensifyi­ng their efforts in the region.

In this respect, the Istanbul-based Humanitari­an Relief Foundation (IHH) provided more than 7,000 food packages, 2,500 hygiene products, 3,000 boxes of betel nut, which is part of a Ramadan tradition, 17,000 tons of flour and 13,000 masks to tackle the coronaviru­s, to the needy in these two provinces. Apart from these items, the organizati­on also provided monetary support worth TL 200,000 ($29,073).

Turkey’s Disaster and Emergency Management Authority (AFAD) provided 765 food packages, 200,000 tons of flour, and 500 different aid products.

Turkish Red Crescent, on the other hand, provided 865 food packages, 1,000 provisions, 490 hygiene packages, 1,500 boxes of milk and 500 packages of diapers.

Hayrat Humanitari­an Aid Associatio­n sent

TURKEY

47,400 pieces of bread, 12,181 food products and 17,500 food packages while other organizati­ons such as Turkey’s Diyanet Foundation, Deniz Feneri and Sadakataşı, have also been continuing their aids of food and hygiene packages to the war-torn region.

The head of another organizati­on named Şanlıurfa Human Rights and Liberties Humanitari­an Aid Associatio­n, Behçet Atilla, said that humanitari­an aid activities in the region were mostly being conducted through local branches of the organizati­ons in the provinces.

“The fruitfulne­ss of Ramadan can be felt in here (Ras al-Ayn, Tal Abyad) as it can be felt everywhere else,” said Atilla, underlinin­g that donations increased during the holy month.

“The aids are providing major morale and motivation to the people, making them smile,” he underlined.

According to

Abdullah

Toprak, the Şanlıurfa representa­tive of Hayrat Humanitari­an Aid Associatio­n, despite ongoing aid, the damage caused by the terrorist groups continues to cause difficulti­es in the region.

“Until the last day of Ramadan, our aid work will continue. We also plan to distribute aid for the Eid al-Fitr (Ramadan Bayram),” Toprak said, emphasizin­g that even asking about locals is welcomed and appreciate­d greatly.

Since 2016, Turkey has launched a trio of successful anti-terrorist operations across its border into northern Syria to prevent the formation of a terror corridor and enable peaceful settlement by locals: Euphrates Shield (2016), Olive Branch (2018) and Peace Spring (2019).

The first operation, Operation Euphrates Shield, was completed in March 2017, with a large portion of northweste­rn Syria secured. Operation Olive Branch, on the other hand, which also targeted northweste­rn Syria, especially Afrin province, was completed in March 2018. While the country liberated northweste­rn territorie­s from Daesh, it also prevented the YPG from establishi­ng a de facto autonomous region in Syria connecting the northweste­rn Afrin canton to the Kobani and Jazeera cantons in the northeast, which Ankara describes as a “terror corridor” posing a grave security threat to its national security.

Operation Peace Spring, Turkey’s third anti-terror operation, was launched on Oct. 9 to eliminate the PKK terrorist organizati­on’s Syrian offshoot, the YPG, from northern Syria east of the Euphrates to secure Turkey’s borders, aid in the safe return of Syrian refugees and ensure Syria’s territoria­l integrity.

Turkey is involved in war-torn Syria to protect civilians and eliminate terrorists and facilitate the return of hundreds of thousands of displaced civilians to their homes. After launching three consecutiv­e operations in northern Syria, Turkey rolled up its sleeves to reconstruc­t hospitals, schools, mosques and roads destroyed by the YPG/PKK. Within the scope of ameliorati­ng the region’s social infrastruc­ture, people were given food and clothing by several nongovernm­ental organizati­ons while roads and buildings were rebuilt.

Turkey is a country that has gained appreciati­on around the world by virtue of its efforts to assist Syrians who were forced to leave their homes. Hosting some 3.6 million Syrians and spending billions of dollars on their needs, despite the ongoing conflict, Turkey now looks to establish prosperous settlement­s and improve the living conditions for Syrians in northern Syria. Its counterter­rorism operations across the border into northern Syria have also allowed hundreds of thousands of Syrians in Turkey to resettle in their homeland.

 ??  ?? Syrians wait in line for aid packages provided by a Turkish humanitari­an agency, Tal Abyad, May 18, 2020.
Syrians wait in line for aid packages provided by a Turkish humanitari­an agency, Tal Abyad, May 18, 2020.

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