The Syrian refugee community in the Turkish border city of Kilis has become victim of frequent burglary and robbery causing a prevailing feeling of insecurity among residents, especially Syrians, which caused a wave of concern among Syrian people over the social media, who called the Turkish authority to provide more security to distant areas on the city.
Sources reported to Eqtsad that many Syrian refugees in the city of Kilis have recently been subjected to armed robberies and in different neighborhoods who demanded taking the victims’ money, mobile phones and other valuables.
A lady reported that her friend was subject to an armed robbery when she was attacked by a thief who cut her face and forced her to give him her mobile, the irony that the attack took place at the entrance of the building she live in and in midday.
The friend mentioned that the victim suffers of severe stress and fear despite treatment she received, moreover, people around were alerted and became worried that the same could happen to them, especially women.
The mentioned incidents was not a separate case, as a 50-year-old man was forced to hand over his mobile phone and the money he had three days ago, after breaking into his shop in Akram Shatin neighborhood by two masked men.
Due to these difficult circumstances, a Syrian refugee Ali Hamido who live in the city told Eqtsad that fear of armed robbery was like a nightmare. "since the escalation of the robberies in Kilis city, I do not allow my wife or my mother to go out on their own, even they were afraid to go up to the roof of the building to hang up the laundry”.
He added that crimes are common in all the cities of the world, but he ask the Turkish authority to provide more effort to put an end to the crimes targeting the Syrians in the city.
Moreover and to urge the Turkish authorities to tighten their security control, Hamido called on Syrian refugees to hold a sit-in in front of the headquarters of the city council to demand strengthening of security patrols on neighborhoods far from the center of the city.
It is estimated that number of Syrians in the city of Keles is higher than native residents, according to a recent statistics by the joint Association of Turkish Associations of Employers and the Center research of Policy and Migration