Thursday, September 17, 2015

Syrians wait in hope at Turkey's northern borders

Hundreds of Syrian refugees hoping to cross the Turkish border into Greece or Bulgaria will be removed by the weekend, the local governor said Thursday.

Dursun Ali Sahin, the governor of Erdine province bordering Greece and Bulgaria, said the refugees, who are mostly Syrians, would have to return to refugee camps in southern Turkey.

“They have to leave here tomorrow and the day after tomorrow,” he said.


  •  “The refugees have been misinformed about migration to European countries and so they come to Edirne. If they stay in Edirne they will try to reach Greece or Bulgaria. We cannot permit them to stay here.”

He spoke as hundreds staged a sit-in protest at Edirne’s bus station, calling for the borders to be opened. Many refused food or water being offered by Turkish aid workers, insisting they wanted to continue into Europe.

Others are waiting at Istanbul’s Bayrampasa bus station in the hope of travelling to the border region and on to Europe.

“I want to thank the Turkish people,” refugee Imad Latif told Anadolu Agency. “They helped us but now we want to go European countries. That's our only dream.”

  • Ahmed Suleiman interrupted his university education to flee the war and has been unable to find work despite speaking three languages. “I believe that we will have a better life in Europe,” he said.

Mohammed Hussein, 25, came to Edirne with his wife and two-month-old son Mohammed. He said his remaining family had been killed in the civil war in Syria.

  • “I had no other choice,” he said. “If I stayed in Syria, I and my wife would die as well. We decided to leave the country when my son was born and we came to Turkey. From now on, I want a better future for my son, not me.”

One Syrian child, Seht Ali, said he had arrived in Turkey nearly a year ago. “My dream come true is to be a doctor after I finish my education,” he said. “I want to treat the suffering people like us if I become a doctor.”

With around 2 million refugees, Turkey is home to the world’s largest such population, according to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees.

 www.aa.com.tr
 17/9/15
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1 comment :

  1. Bulgaria began deploying up to 1,000 troops Thursday to buttress its southeastern border with Turkey with hundreds of migrants stranded for a third day on the Turkish side, a senior official said....

    "We have triggered a plan for the start of the step-by-step deployment of up to 1,000 troops along the whole Bulgarian-Turkish border [within the next week]," interior ministry chief of staff Georgy Kostov said.

    The move followed an overnight attempt by 660 migrants to cross into Bulgaria illegally, Kostov said, adding Bulgarian patrols spotted the trespassers and alerted Turkish authorities, who turned them back at the border.

    EU member Bulgaria has already sent more than 1,000 extra police to its porous 260-kilometer (160-mile) Turkish border and sealed part of it with a 30-kilometre razor-wire fence that is being extended.

    Prime Minister Boyko Borisov approved a plan involving joint army-police border patrols which took effect Thursday morning, Kostov added.......AFP

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