Khaleej Times

Turkey aims for one million refugees to return to Syria

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Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Tuesday said Ankara was aiming to encourage one million Syrian refugees to return to their country by building them housing and local infrastruc­ture there.

Turkey is today home to more than 3.6 million Syrian refugees, who fled after a civil war broke out in 2011 in Turkey’s southern neighbour.

“We are preparing a project for the return of one million of our Syrian

sisters and brothers to their home country,” Erdogan said in a video address.

He said his government would work with internatio­nal and local civil society organisati­ons to reach the goal.

The video was broadcast to hundreds in Idlib, northweste­rn Syria, during a ceremony to hand out keys to houses that Turkey has constructe­d in the war-torn country’s north for displaced Syrians, an AFP correspond­ent said. Erdogan said around 500,000 Syrians have returned to “safe zones” on the Turkey-syria border since 2016.

Turkey plans to encourage more to return by building more houses for the returnees inside Syria.

“We will carry out this project with 13 local assemblies in the region, especially in Azaz, Al Bab, Tal Abyad and Ras Al Ayn and it’s pretty comprehens­ive,” Erdogan said.

Under the project, Turkey will also help build a school and a hospital to serve those returning, and help with infrastruc­ture needed by the local economy, “from agricultur­e to industry”. Turkish Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu on Tuesday visited the Kammouneh camps in Sarmada region, northweste­rn Syria, for the ceremony.

Speaking to a jubilant crowd waving Turkish flags, Soylu said Turkey would continue to support Syrians and at least 100,000 homes would be ready by the end of 2022 in the region.

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 suffered an economic crisis last summer. — afp

 ?? ?? Turkish Minister of Interior Süleyman Soylu greets a boy as he arrives with a delegation to inaugurate a housing complex for internally displaced Syrians built with Turkey’s support, at the Kammouneh camps near the town of
Sarmada in Syria’s Idlib province. — afp
Turkish Minister of Interior Süleyman Soylu greets a boy as he arrives with a delegation to inaugurate a housing complex for internally displaced Syrians built with Turkey’s support, at the Kammouneh camps near the town of Sarmada in Syria’s Idlib province. — afp

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