Syrian refugees find life in Turkey tight

Syrian refugees find life in Turkey tight
Syrian refugees find life in Turkey tight
Syrian refugees find life in Turkey tight: Syrian refugees based in Istanbul, the Turkish capital, have been given leave to leave the city by next Tuesday, after which they will be forced out of Turkey.

Turkish authorities have asked undocumented refugees in Istanbul to return to the provinces in which their names were enrolled.

The BBC has learned from several refugees that they are being forced to move to Syria's province of Idlib, where fighting has intensified in recent days.

He added that many refugees are being forced to sign documents forcibly leaving voluntary 'Turkey' whose language they do not understand.

The order to leave Istanbul was issued in July, with a one-month delay.

About five million Syrian refugees are registered in Istanbul, but it is estimated that more than one million Syrian refugees are living in Istanbul illegally after they have migrated to other provinces.

Syrian refugees were instructed to leave Istanbul with their identity documents at any moment, as they could be checked at any time while on their way to the city.

Turkey is proud that it has given asylum to the highest number of 6 million refugees in the world. But now the patience of their patience is growing.

International law does not permit deportation of unregistered migrants. The Turkish government says Syrian refugees returning are voluntarily moving to areas that the Turkish army has cleared of militants.

But the BBC has spoken to several refugees who have been forced to retreat, where the war is still intensifying.

In the areas of Istanbul where the majority of refugees live, the story of migrants who were forced to leave Turkey was forced to sign and return documents and did not even give them a chance to read the documents. went.

The BBC correspondent told a Syrian refugee who was expelled from Turkey that when he crossed the border and saw the Turkish flag, he hated Turkey because he believed that Turkey was a race. Is a fan country.

Syrian refugees find life in Turkey tight
Syrian refugees find life in Turkey tight


Another Syrian refugee said that Turkey's people are Syrian refugees in the eyes of Syria, like insects that are squeezing Turkish blood.

After eight years of war in Syria, Turkey's gates are now closing in on Syrian refugees and are no longer welcome.

In early August, 12,000 Syrian refugees were forcibly transferred from Istanbul to the provinces where they were enrolled, while some 260 refugees were transferred to camps operating under the Interior Ministry. Thousands of businesses were raided where illegal immigrants were employed.

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