DiscoverInternational Security Archives - The World from PRXSyrian refugees and migrants in Turkey face a difficult decision to return home
Syrian refugees and migrants in Turkey face a difficult decision to return home

Syrian refugees and migrants in Turkey face a difficult decision to return home

Update: 2021-09-23
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Mohammed Ammar, 23, works at a lively cell phone repair shop on a bustling street in a largely Syrian district of Istanbul. 

Quieter than his coworkers and dressed more formally, Mohammed Ammar takes his job seriously, because he knows how hard it is to find one. In the past three months, five of his friends got so desperate for work, they decided to return to Syria, a country they fled years ago.

“The pandemic affected [my friends'] decision [to leave Turkey.]  ... When they left, they had no money to live.”

Mohammed Ammar, 23, Syrian who works at a cell phone shop in Istanbul, Turkey

“The pandemic affected their decision,” said Mohammed Ammar, who asked not to use his last name because he is living with a temporary protection residency in Turkey. “When they left, they had no money to live.”

Related: 06:24 rgfko_4bg&q=https://www.pri.org/stories/2021-09-10/drought-iraq-and-syria-could-totally-collapse-food-system-millions-aid-groups&sa=U&ved=2ahUKEwj1q9LrzpXzAhVkFFkFHQfxCLUQFnoECAIQAg&usg=AOvVaw3BfB2w8QSULB42_XAmVNtT" target="_self">Drought in Iraq and Syria could collapse food system for millions

These are the tough choices that millions of Syrians are wrestling with around the world.

After 10 years of civil war, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad remains in power, controlling vast swaths of the country with an iron fist. Other parts of the country are controlled by largely Kurdish militias and opposition fighters backed by Turkish forces.

In Turkey, the COVID-19 pandemic was hard on Syrians, Mohammed Ammar said.

Many find informal work for less than minimum wage, or in the service sector, and some lost their jobs when Turkey went under lockdown. While many Turkish citizens had some measures of protection from the government or financial aid, many Syrians did not.

Related: 06:24 rgfko_4bg&q=https://www.pri.org/stories/2021-05-14/she-survived-chemical-attack-syria-could-her-baby-have-been-impacted&sa=U&ved=2ahUKEwiT_4WEz5XzAhWjFVkFHQIyAwQ4ChAWegQIAhAC&usg=AOvVaw0A6410yrswTwqsK3JfmsEl" target="_self">She survived a chemical attack in Syria





A worker pours a cup of strong coffee at a Syrian sweet shop in Istanbul. Unemployment rates in Turkey are high, and the pandemic affected Syrian workers particularly severely.

A worker pours a cup of strong coffee at a Syrian sweet shop in Istanbul. Unemployment rates in Turkey are high, and the pandemic affected Syrian workers particularly severely. 




Credit:

Durrie Bouscaren/The World 






His five friends returned to different parts of the country, but all found themselves in increasingly dire circumstances with food and fuel shortages and few job opportunities. Now, finding themselves in a country with rising food prices that outpace any potential earnings, they regret their decision to go back.

He worries about them.

“Now they regret their decision,” Mohammed Ammar said. “They can’t make it there. Life is so difficult, and they want to come back to Turkey again.”

Related: 06:24 rgfko_4bg&q=https://www.pri.org/stories/2021-05-12/decade-war-has-devastated-syrias-health-care-system&sa=U&ved=2ahUKEwiT_4WEz5XzAhWjFVkFHQIyAwQ4ChAWegQICRAC&usg=AOvVaw36BiUsuL51tuN8AzPBWjXn" target="_self">A decade of war has devastated Syria's health care system 





Workers help a customer at a Syrian dessert shop in Istanbul.

Workers help a customer at a Syrian dessert shop in Istanbul. 




Credit:

Durrie Bouscaren/The World 






'Voluntary returns'

Despite these challenges, several foreign governments are actively encouraging  — and sometimes forcing — Syrian refugees who live within their borders to return to the war-torn nation.

In Lebanon, raids on refugee camps and mass arrests make life so unbearable that “voluntary” returns can hardly be classified that way, human rights groups warn. In Denmark, the government has revoked residence permits from some Syrians, because it believes the Syrian capital Damascus is safe. The Turkish government has also been accused of deporting Syrians to northern Syria since 2019.

Refugee returns are a popular rallying cry among nationalist voters in Turkey, where 3.7 million Syrians are registered as refugees.

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The Turkish government claims that 450,000 Syrian refugees have already returned to Syria from Turkey — a number that does not include the high numbers of people who return again to Turkey after staying in Syria. (The UNHCR puts the number of voluntary refugee returns to Syria from all countries at approximately 282,000.)

Polls show that Turkish voters do want Syrian refugees to return — and politicians are capitalizing on these sentiments.

Turkey’s main opposition leader, Kemal Kılıçkaroğlu, has pledged to facilitate the return of refugees to Syria within two years if his party comes into power.

“I am not a racist. I am not angry at the people who came here, but at the people who made them come here,” Kılıçdaroğlu said on Sept 2. “Everyone should go to their country and live there in peace. They can receive humanitarian assistance there.”

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Syrian refugees and migrants in Turkey face a difficult decision to return home

Syrian refugees and migrants in Turkey face a difficult decision to return home

The World