October 24, 2019
He says he now wants to graduate and build a new life
2 million Syrian refugees after President Recep Tayyip Erdogan declared an open
door policy at the onset of the war.Only around 260,000 Syrians stay China auto bearings factorys Suppliers
in camps near the border, with the vast majority scattered throughout the
country including big cities like Istanbul. But many families bank on young men
working outside to earn a living and many youth work as cheap labourers well
below the average wages. We are working very closely with the education ministry
to make sure this target is realised,†Philippe Duamelle, Turkey representative
for the UN Children’s Fund (Unicef), said.â€
Adding to the challenge, some 150,000
Syrian children have been born in Turkey since the start of the crisis."We
cannot survive without working outside,†said 35-year-old Azimet Tusuz,
carefully examining the prices of different brands of cooking oil at the
supermarket.On Thursday, German Chancellor Angela Merkel will lead a meeting on
the migrant crisis, Europe’s worst since World War II, of eight European states
and Turkey."We have no problem with schools,†she said.
If we cannot provide
them with minimum assistance they might be likely to move again.Maha Abdullah,
38, waiting for her 12-year-old daughter at a training centre for Syrian girls
in the city of Sanliurfa founded with EU funds, said earning a living was a
priority.But unlike hundreds of thousands of others who in 2015 crossed the
Aegean Sea in search of better lives in Europe, he has no plans to leave.
There’s nothing like your homeland,†Ahlem Hanefi, 33, said at the Osmaniye
camp.But it has long complained of being given next to no financial help to look
after them, despite spending some $8 billion itself."It is an ambitious
one.
People are dying to go to Europe, while some are dying for their homeland
in Syria.2 billion) in aid for Syrian refugees."And the other is that we have to
suppress human trafficking at the border with the help of the Turkish police,â€
he said."I have no dreams of going to Europe,†Mohammed, from the Syrian coastal
region of Latakia, said in the Osmaniye refugee camp in southern Turkey. One is
making staying in Turkey more attractive†for the Syrian refugees in the
country.
Grappling with the influx of migrants, Brussels struck a deal in
November with Ankara for Turkey to help stem the flow of migrants in return for
three billion euros ($3. We are not politicians.EU ambassador to Turkey,
Hansjorg Haber, who AFP accompanied on a visit to the Osmaniye camp, said there
would be a new focus with the injection of fresh funds under the Ankara-Brussels
deal.. Mohammed, 22, has lived in Turkey for four years since fleeing Syria,
just months after the civil war erupted that has torn his homeland apart."I
think we have to rely on two things.Mohammed, 22, has lived in Turkey for four
years since fleeing Syria, just months after the civil war erupted that has torn
his homeland apart.The European Union wants to see more cases like Mohammed —
people who find the right conditions to live in Turkey rather than travelling to
Europe, and want to return to Syria when the time is right. I don’t want to go
to Europe.
He says he now wants to graduate and build a new life in Turkey. "But
rent, electricity, water bills are the biggest problem."I will continue my
education with God’s permission and start a life here before returning to Syria
once the war is over,†added Mohammed, whose own relatives left and went to
Belgium. It’s not our job to stop migration,†WFP’s Turkey representative
Jean-Yves Lequime said.Education is one of the main challenges."Therefore,
there’s a need to scale up the services for both. Some refugees are angry with
their fellows who risked their lives to go to Europe. He said UNICEF faced a
double challenge to keep up standards in the widely-praised camps and to look
after the more than 85 per cent of the refugees living outside the camps.Turkey
is home to at least 2.â€
The World Food Programme, which has rolled out electronic
vouchers for Syrian refugees to shop at supermarkets, is hoping to utilise more
funds after the Ankara-Brussels agreement to reach out to the most vulnerable
Syrians living outside the camps.Mohammed attended Turkish language classes and
was found eligible in 2013 to attend university in the southeastern city of
Mardin.Refugees in camps have access to basic services like education and
healthcare. In September, the Turkish government promised to double the number
of Syrian refugees at school, from the current 230,000
Posted by: wheelunit at
02:33 AM
| No Comments
| Add Comment
Post contains 767 words, total size 5 kb.
13kb generated in CPU 0.0049, elapsed 0.023 seconds.
33 queries taking 0.0195 seconds, 47 records returned.
Powered by Minx 1.1.6c-pink.
33 queries taking 0.0195 seconds, 47 records returned.
Powered by Minx 1.1.6c-pink.