Syrians in Turkey cross border after earthquake

Husam18 فبراير 2023آخر تحديث :
Syrians in Turkey cross border after earthquake

Hundreds of Syrians living in Turkey have returned to the war-torn country after last week’s devastating earthquake

The Turkish government has allowed Syrians with ID cards from the quake-hit Turkish provinces to leave for up to six months

The rule change has led to hundreds queuing for hours at border crossings

Almost four million Syrians have settled in Turkey since civil war broke out in their home country 12 years ago

Some survivors of last week’s earthquake are making the trip to the crossings in an attempt to reunite with family members back in Syria, some of whom they have not seen for years

Among them is Reem, who with her nine-month old baby wrapped in a blanket, said she was travelling back to Syria after her home in Turkey was destroyed

She told the BBC she believed hostility towards Syrians in Turkey had grown since the earthquake

“We tried to find another place to stay but they [the Turkish] kept chasing us away asking us to return to Syria,” she said

“We tried staying at mosques but they kicked us out. They also didn’t give us any tents. Should I stay in the street with my children? Where should we go

Many of those queueing have travelled with their families and large amounts of luggage, waiting for security personnel to allow them forward for processing

Abbas Albakour told the AFP news agency he was returning home to Syria after his home in Kharamanmaras, near the earthquake’s epicentre, had been destroyed

“In Syria, there have been problems for 12 years, but right now the biggest catastrophe is in Turkey,” he said at the Cilvegozu border crossing

About 1,500 Syrians living in Turkey are thought to have died in the earthquake. Around 3.5 million Syrians in Turkey are registered as refugees, according to the United Nations (UN)

Meanwhile, rescue efforts are continuing in Turkey. On Friday, two more people were pulled alive from the rubble in the city of Antakya some 11 days on from the earthquake

One of the survivors, Mustafa Acvi, 34, was found alive after being trapped for 261 hours. While being carried on a stretcher, he was put on a video call with his parents who showed him his new-born baby, according to Turkish state news agency Anadolu

Nurse Deborah Swan, who was part of the UK’s search and rescue response in the Hatay province, told the BBC she treated a man who had been trapped under a collapsed building for three days when a large aftershock occurred

“It’s quite disconcerting being in an unstable, collapsed structure particularly when there’s a large aftershock,” she told Radio 4’s Today programme

“We have to leave the building immediately [when an aftershock occurs] but as soon as we realise the building is okay, we go straight back in

The rescued man stands a “very good chance of surviving”, Ms Swan said

But such rescues are becoming increasingly rare. The death toll in Turkey now stands at more than 38,000, making it the deadliest in the country’s history

In Syria, more than 5,800 people have died – the majority in the north-west, an area held by rebel insurgents who are at war with the government of President Bashar al-Assad. The conflict has complicated aid efforts in the country

The UN announced on Friday that more than 140 lorries carrying aid have crossed into north-western Syria from Turkey since the earthquake

Before the earthquake struck, almost all humanitarian aid was delivered through just one crossing – Bab al-Hawa

But earlier this week, Syria agreed to allow the UN to open two further border crossings to help bring in more aid for the earthquake and conflict-hit area

“We expect to have trucks crossing every single day,” UN spokesman Jens Laerke told reporters in Geneva

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