General Directorate of Migration of the Interior Ministry released the latest figures regarding Syrian refugees, millions of whom fled to Turkey since the war in Turkey’s southern neighbor broke out five years ago. Turkey currently hosts 2,749,140 refugees from Syria, with 145,000 arriving in the first three months of 2016.
These numbers will continue to swell, as the number of refugees in Turkey from Syria was only 14,237 in 2012. With the rise of new actors in the bloody Syrian conflict, including DAESH, which is terrorizing the northern regions of Syria close to the Turkish border, as well as Russia’s active military role in support of the Assad regime, may displace more people, experts predict. The possibility to reach Europe in pursuit of a better life attracts more Syrians to Turkey, embattled with the highest number of refugees in the Middle East.
Interior Ministry figures show only 270,380 refugees are staying in the refugee camps set up by Turkey in border cities, while others either live on their own in rental houses or old buildings in which they squat, as well as makeshift tents. Wealthier Syrians opt for starting up businesses catering to their community while those from impoverished families hope to scrape out a living, as the government introduced temporary work permits for refugees earlier this year. The majority of refugees are men and more than 1.3 million refugees are below the age of 19, raising concerns that a so-called “lost generation of Syrians” will face a bleak future.
The number of Syrians surpassed the 2 million mark last year for the first time, increasing to 2,503,549, and the latest number – over 2.7 million – was recorded as of March 31. The number may further increase although Turkey has seen less displaced Syrians amassed at border crossings recently, as clashes between DAESH and rebels, as well as clashes between rebels and Syrian regime forces, have blocked migration routes towards the border.
Turkey has built 26 “temporary accommodation centers” for refugees in 10 cities near the border. Those centers are either tent camps, or housing units resembling shipping containers, offering basic services such as clinics to migrants, along with schools for young refugees and lifelong learning classes for adults. Şanlıurfa, again, tops the list of most refugees staying in camps with 109,936, followed by border province Gaziantep with 40,732 refugees in camps.
Though Turkey rightly boasts of hosting the largest number of refugees from Syria and is praised by the international community for the quality of their refugee camps, Ankara complains of a lack of international help with sharing the burden. Ankara has repeatedly called for establishing “safe zones” within Syria for internally displaced people, and a transition period in the war-torn country, without regime leader Bashar Assad, to end the conflict and therefore the refugee flow to Turkey and other countries. Turkey recently signed a deal with the European Union to reduce the flow of refugees from Syria to the continent, as more migrants were seeking illegal means to travel to Europe. Under the new deal which is still underway, Europe will resettle newly-arrived migrants from Greece to Turkey, in return for which the EU will take in Syrian refugees from Turkey.