Baltimore Sun

Syrian refugees promised temporary return home

Thousands rush to Turkish border on word of new policy

- By Raja Abdulrahim and Mohammad Haj Kadour

Thousands of Syrian refugees in Turkey lined up at border crossings Wednesday in hopes of returning home temporaril­y after Syrian border officials announced that Turkey had agreed to let the refugees leave and return later while it copes with a disastrous earthquake.

Many of those crossing at three border posts were carrying suitcases, plastic bags and potato sacks holding whatever personal belongings they had been able to salvage from destroyed homes. Most of their faces didn’t reflect enthusiasm: They were leaving one disaster zone for another.

The Syrian administra­tion of Bab al-Hawa, one of the main border crossings from Turkey into an opposition-held territory in northweste­rn Syria, announced via social media that Turkey would allow refugees living in the earthquake zone to return to their homeland for three to six months and then come back to Turkey.

Turkish officials could not immediatel­y be reached for comment. But if confirmed, this would be a policy shift by Turkey, albeit under extraordin­ary circumstan­ces. Turkey hosts about 3.7 million Syrians and has tightly controlled the border with Syria for years to prevent more refugees from coming in.

Returning Syrians acknowledg­ed they risked not being allowed back into Turkey.

“We have no other choice but to go to Syria,” Younis al-Saeed, a 29-year-old father of two, said as he stood on line on the Turkish side of Bab al-Hawa, waiting to cross. “But of course there is a fear that Turkey won’t allow us to return. We can’t guarantee it.”

Mazen Alloush, a spokespers­on for the Syrian side of the Bab al-Hawa crossing, said there were about 1.7 million Syrians living in the Turkish areas devastated by the earthquake, which killed more than 40,000 people in Turkey and Syria and left millions homeless in the two countries.

Syria has been carved into different zones of control during a 12-year civil war that is ongoing. The Bab al-Hawa crossing is administer­ed by a Syrian opposition group that controls part of the country’s northwest.

Alloush said that over the past few days, the local government linked to that opposition group had met with Turkish officials. Turkey decided to allow Syrians to go home temporaril­y as it recovers and rebuilds , then return later, Alloush said.

He added that he expected about 3,000 Syrians to cross through the Bab alHawa a day and that more would go through other border crossings. At least two other border crossings were already being used by refugees to return to Syria.

In May, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey announced a significan­t expansion of his country’s plan to entice Syrian refugees back to their homeland by building homes for them in Syria near the Turkish border. He made the announceme­nt amid an acute economic crisis in Turkey that has since deepened and fueled widespread anger toward the large number of refugees there, including Syrians and Afghans.

While the death toll and destructio­n has been greater in Turkey, the location of the epicenter of the quake, the temblor also cut a path of destructio­n across a large swath of northweste­rn Syria, including areas under the control of Syrian President Bashar Assad and another under the anti-government opposition.

Those returning to Syria on Wednesday found a country still bearing the scars of war as well as the familiar buildings turned to rubble that they witnessed in Turkey. Syrians left homeless by the earthquake in Syria are struggling to find places to live as the region

suffers from an acute shortage of tents and temporary housing.

About 40,000 families have been left homeless, but these are rough estimates, said Muneer Mustafa, the deputy chief of the White Helmets, a rescue group in the opposition territory of northweste­rn Syria.

The border crossings have also been used for more than 100 United Nations aid trucks that have sent to northweste­rn Syria since the quake as well returning more than 1,400 bodies of Syrians who died in the earthquake in Turkey and will be buried in their homeland.

Some of the refugees leaving this week said they planned to spend a few months in Syria until Turkey emerged from its state of emergency and made cities and towns inhabitabl­e again. But others said they had no intention of returning to Turkey; with parts of the country now in a state of destructio­n, they might as well return home.

“We are going back because we no longer have a place to shelter here,” said Mohammad Mohammad, 40, who was lined up with his wife and two young children. They carried with them a potato sack stuffed with clothes.

 ?? NICOLE TUNG/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? People wait to return to Syria from Turkey on Wednesday at the Cilvegozu border crossing after Syrian border officials announced a Turkish policy change.
NICOLE TUNG/THE NEW YORK TIMES People wait to return to Syria from Turkey on Wednesday at the Cilvegozu border crossing after Syrian border officials announced a Turkish policy change.

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