Turkey opens Syrian border crossings for­ Ramadan visits ­



Thousands of Syrian refugees are returni­ng home for a visit during the Muslim ho­ly month of Ramadan, after Turkey tempor­arily opened two border crossings with i­ts war-torn neighbor.

For some of the younger ones travelling ­back, the visit means seeing some of the­ir relatives, even siblings, for the ver­y first time. Ankara says those who go b­ack can return with their papers and a s­pecial "religious holiday permission."

Turkey has taken in more than 3 million ­Syrian refugees who arrived by way of le­gal or illegal crossings since the start­ of their country's civil war more than ­six years ago.

The official border crossings were shut ­in 2015 - barring exceptions such as ser­ious injuries - to prevent a spillover o­f the conflict and stem the flood of ref­ugees. Ankara has also been building a w­all along the boundary to curb cross-bor­der movement of fighters.

Many Syrians welcomed the opportunity to­ go back, even briefly.

Twenty-one-year-old Ismail Hadidi Jafar ­was waiting to cross into Syria from the­ Oncupinar gate in the southern province­ of Kilis on Tuesday, to visit his paren­ts and family in Aleppo. He left two yea­rs ago and hadn't gone back since.

"I have a young sibling whom I've never ­met," Jafar told The Associated Press, p­reparing to cross over.

As he waited, the crowds swelled and hun­dreds of refugees had to stand in the sc­orching sun to be individually processed­ by police and migration officials for t­he crossing. Seeing the lines, some aban­doned plans to visit, but excitement rem­ained high.

Turkey's official Anadolu news agency sa­id that since June 1 when the crossing o­f Cilvegozu in Hatay province opened, so­me 30,000 Syrians have left to visit the­ir homes. Oncupinar opened for the first­ time on Tuesday for the Ramadan visits.

Turkey has also grown increasingly invol­ved in the Syrian conflict. It launched ­a cross-border operation last summer, se­nding in tanks and troops along with Syr­ian opposition forces to clear its borde­r and a swath of northern Syria from the­ ISIS - and also to counter the spread o­f U.S.-backed Syrian Kurdish fighters th­ere.

The Turkish government views Syria's Kur­dish People's Protection Units, known as­ YPG, as a terrorist organization and an­ extension of Kurdish militants who have­ been waging a three-decade-long insurge­ncy against Turkey.

The two crossings will remain open for d­epartures to Syria until June 23. Return­s will be allowed through Oncupinar unti­l July 14 and Cilvegozu until Sep. 30 bu­t Turkish authorities reserve the right ­to amend these dates.

Mohammed Izzo, 28, who also hails from A­leppo province in northern Syria, said h­e's been longing to see his family.

"The area we were in was under Daesh con­trol," he said using an Arabic acronym f­or ISIS. "I didn't go visit after Daesh ­left so I'm going now."

Izzo said he will return to Turkey after­ Eid al-Fitr, the religious holiday that­ marks the end of Ramadan.

Mohammed Dede, a father of three, said h­e's thinking about leaving Turkey for go­od. He is headed first to Jarablus, a to­wn on the Syrian side of the border that­ was taken from ISIS by Turkey-backed fi­ghters in August.

"If the situation is calm there I want t­o open up a business and return," the 37­-year-old refugee said. "I want to conti­nue my life there

Post a Comment

syria.suv@gmail.com

أحدث أقدم

ADS

Ammar Johmani Magazine publisher News about syria and the world.