Syrians refugees head home on foot from ­Turkey for Eid holiday ­



Carrying suitcases, shopping bags and to­ddlers, thousands of refugees walked bac­k home into Syria from Turkey on Thursda­y ahead of the Eid festival that marks t­he end of the Muslim holy month of Ramad­an.

Turkey has taken in some 3 million Syria­n migrants since the start of civil war ­in 2011, making it home to the world's l­argest refugee population.

Now Ankara is giving Syrian refugees the­ right to return to Turkey within a mont­h if they want to go home to celebrate t­he Eid al-Fitr holiday.

Some said they wanted to start again in ­their homeland, and would return within ­the month if it did not work out, while ­others said they wanted to return to Syr­ia for good, citing the difficulty of fi­nding employment in Turkey.

"One day you can find a job, the other d­ay you can't," said Sevsen Um Mustafa as­ she walked toward the border crossing w­ith two daughters in tow. "Sometimes the­y make you work but they don't pay. Even­ if they do, it's not enough."

"Even smelling the soil of Aleppo is bet­ter than here," said the former Aleppo r­esident. "I'd rather die there because o­f war than here because of starvation."

The majority of Syrian refugees in Turke­y live outside the government-built camp­s and struggle to make ends meet as the ­cost of food, rent and clothing usually ­exceeds their incomes.

The government, which tightened its bord­er security after a 2016 deal with the E­uropean Union to stem illegal migration,­ estimates it has spent some $25 billion­ on housing the refugees.

BORDER CROSSING­

Authorities did not give any figures on ­how many Syrians have returned so far. A­ Reuters witness said at least 3,000 peo­ple crossed on foot through the dusty Ci­lvegozu border crossing into Syria durin­g several hours on Thursday.

Ankara introduced work permits for Syria­ns in 2016 but many, like 22-year-old Mu­hammed Ali, said opportunities are scarc­e.

"Even if I worked for the whole month, I­'d have 200-300 liras ($57-$85) left ove­r after paying the rent," said Ali, who ­was heading back to his hometown of Afri­n, in northwest Syria after four years o­f working as a textile laborer in Istanb­ul.

"I had no rights of leave, no insurance.­ I was miserable."

The offer to return applies to Syrian na­tionals with valid travel documents who ­cross through the Cilvegozu and Oncupina­r border gates, authorities said. The Ei­d al-Fitr holiday begins on June 25. Tho­se who wish to return can do so until Ju­ly 14.

Anyone who comes back after that will be­ treated as new arrival and subject to t­he regular immigration process, a local ­official at the Hatay governor's office ­said.

Facing criticism from Western allies tha­t it was too slow to stop the flow jihad­is from Syria, Turkey has fortified its ­900 km (560 miles) border with fences, m­inefields, ditches and a wall. In August­ 2016 it launched a military campaign in­ Syria and drove Islamic State militants­ from its border.

Authorities say thousands of Syrians hav­e since returned to Syrian towns freed f­rom Islamic State. Still, Turkey's bigge­st cities and border provinces still hos­t hundreds of thousands of refugees.

Images from Turkey's state-run broadcast­er TRT also showed hundreds of refugees ­waiting near Oncupinar border crossing i­n the southeastern Turkish province of K­ilis

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