A monitoring group says at least eight Syrian refugees, including four children, have been shot dead while trying to enter Turkey. More than 2.7 million Syrians have fled over the border since the war erupted in 2011.
Advertisement
The eight Syrians were shot by Turkish border guards while trying to travel from Kherbet al-Jouz in northwestern Syria to Turkey's Hatay province overnight, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported Sunday.
The Observatory said the group had been displaced by fighting around Manbij, an "Islamic State" stronghold under siege from US-backed forces.
A senior Turkish official cited by The Associated Press said authorities were "unable to independently verify the claims," but were investigating.
"Turkey provides humanitarian assistance to displaced persons in northern Syria and follows an open-door policy - which means we admit refugees whose lives are under imminent threat," the official said.
Dangerous border crossing
In the past, Ankara repeatedly denied charges that its security forces had fired on civilians trying to cross the frontier.
The Britain-based Observatory, a monitoring group that gets its information from a network of sources on the ground, said at least 60 people - all civilians - have been killed in fire by Turkish border guards since the beginning of the year. It added that Sunday's death toll was among the highest yet reported.
Turkey is currently hosting around 2.7 million registered refugees from Syria, according to UN figures, and in recent months it has tightened security along its border with the war-torn country.
Refugees face hardship in Turkey's farm camps
Beyond Izmir's city limits, thousands of Syrian refugees work in agriculture camps, where they live far from health services and are denied basic rights. Diego Cupolo reports from Torbali, Turkey.
Image: DW/D. Cupolo
Live-in farm camps
Far from the reach of basic services, thousands of Syria's poorest refugees take seasonal jobs at live-in farm camps, earning 30 Turkish lira (9.30 euros/$10.25 a day) - half the minimum wage in Turkey. While most workers come from rural areas in Syria, where nomadic farm labor is common, language barriers and their undocumented status leave them vulnerable to abuse.
Image: DW/D. Cupolo
Lost in isolation
In Torbali, a rural town near Izmir, 1,500-2,000 refugees are currently working in such camps, where many have difficulty accessing health care, education and, often times, electricity and clean water. Tracy Lucas, project manager for Mercy Corps in Izmir, has been working to provide not only humanitarian aid to the workers but also information on their rights as refugees.
Image: DW/D. Cupolo
Stunted growth
"Their existence has been just survival. Everything else is secondary, even food," said Lucas. Priority is given to paying the rent for dilapidated tents and abandoned buildings near farm fields, an expense that runs as high as 300 Turkish lira a month. In response, Lucas said many families skip meals, which is evident by stunted growth in some children at the camps.
Image: DW/D. Cupolo
'It's what we know'
Though rent prices are the same in Izmir, where job prospects are higher, Dihal, a Syrian from al-Hasakah (pictured above with his daughter), said he remains in Torbali because his family has always done farm work. "We don't know Izmir," he said. "I will stay here. It's okay. There is a war in Syria and we have no choice."
Image: DW/D. Cupolo
Lack of health services
Seemingly comfortable with his role as a community leader in Torbali, Dihal later explained how he lost a son due to birth complications. A few months ago, one of his wives began having premature contractions, but local doctors weren't prepared to handle the emergency so they referred her to a hospital in Izmir. She had a miscarriage before she arrived.
Image: DW/D. Cupolo
Undocumented, unattended
"People are afraid to register with the police so they stay outside the health care system," said Dr. Cem Terzi, a surgeon in Izmir and founder of the charity Halklarin Koprusu Dernegi (Bridging People). Terzi said he visits the farm camps with groups of volunteer physicians because "they can't afford to reach health services, so we must reach them directly."
Image: DW/D. Cupolo
On paper vs. in the field
Terzi said refugees are entitled to free health care and medicine in Turkey. "On paper they have these rights, but in the field it's not working and some people are very vulnerable." In one case outside the camps, in a suburb of Izmir, a diabetic elderly woman from Syria, above, developed gangrene in her legs after running out of medication.
Image: DW/D. Cupolo
The owner's view
During a recent visit, Terzi spoke with one of the farm owners who thought he was helping refugees by giving them work despite their undocumented status. "[The owner] said he didn't ask them to build tents on the farm … but he likes not having to pay for their transportation costs since they live next to the fields."
Image: DW/D. Cupolo
'These camps exist all around Turkey'
"Sometimes these farm workers don't get paid for one or two months at a time, and it is the government's responsibility to act on this," said Terzi. The issue is not limited to the Izmir region. Lea Wilmsen, a German medical student who also volunteered in Torbali said, "I know these camps exist all around Turkey."