Displaced Turkmen Worry How To Survive As Frigid Temperatures Set In Across Syria

Displaced Turkmen Worry How To Survive As Frigid Temperatures Set In Across Syria
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The Bab Al-Salam refugee camp, near the Syrian-Turkish border.
Khalil Ashawi / Reuters

As frigid temperatures set in across northern Syria, displaced Turkmen worry about how they will manage to survive. Although Turkey has trucked in preemptive loads of blankets, heaters and tents, many of the 20,000 displaced Turkmen residents worry it won't be enough

LATAKIA, Syria – Displaced by months of heavy airstrikes in the country's north, Syria's Turkmen minority – who, as their name suggests, are closely aligned with and related to the Turks – are stuck between a war zone and the closed Turkish border.

Some 20,000 Turkmen villagers in northern Syria have fled their homes since November, when Russian war planes began heavily targeting the area. Now, as winter sets in and Russian airstrikes continue unabated, displaced villagers in shoddy tents across the country's north are waiting for a solution.

“I am not used to such a life. The cold is piercing into my bones," said Abu Muhammad, 54, who left the Turkmen village of Ateira with his family in early December. "We fled the Russian bombing, but now our village is controlled by the regime. Who knows how long we will have to stay here."

On November 24, Turkish fighter jets downed a Russian plane along the Turkey–Syria border, claiming the plane had violated Turkish airspace. Shortly thereafter, Turkmen militants shot down a Russian helicopter that had come to rescue the downed plane's flight crew.

Russian jets pummeled the area for the next month, conducting more than 130 air raids on villages and towns around Mount Turkmen, forcing residents in the area to flee their homes and find shelter in tents in the village of al-Yamdiya on the Syrian–Turkish border.

Turkmen villages in rural Latakia were among the first to rise up against the Syrian regime, and many Turkmen militias are still actively fighting in Syria's civil war, including the Second Turkmen Division, which follows the Free Syrian Army, and the Sheikh Battalion (Mamdouh Joulha).

They have been charged by the Assad government as being pro-opposition, militantly pro-Turkey, and in favor of the reestablishment of Turkish dominance in Syria.

But while many Syrian Turkmen recognize Turkey as their cultural "father," since the beginning of the uprising, Turkmen political leaders have consistently recognized their commitment to a unified, pluralistic Syria with a central state apparatus that represents all of its sectarian and ethnic groups.

Some 200,000 ethnic Turkmen were believed to have lived in Syria before the uprising began, although members of the Syrian-Turkmen Assembly (a coalition of political parties and groups representing the Turkmen) believe the number to be much higher.

While Turkey has provided some aid to the displaced Turkmen minority, it has barred most individuals from crossing into its territory.

 

According to Gerry Simpson at Human Rights Watch: "All eight of Turkey's border crossings with Syria remain closed."

The border has largely remained closed since October, Simpson said, except for a brief period in December, during which Turkish authorities allowed women, children and the elderly entrance due to heavy Russian bombardments.

"I have tried many times to enter Turkey through the al-Yamdiya border point, but I was sent back each time," said Ahmad, 22, from the village of Rabi’a. "My only choice now is to cross the border illegally on foot to the Turkish village of Yayaldagi.”

Over the past month, Turkish charities have sent truckloads of heaters, blankets and tents to the al-Yamdiya border crossing. The aid is part of a preemptive campaign to provide for the basic needs of the displaced before the expected winter snow cripples the region’s transportation. Still, the displaced Turkmen have no idea when they'll be able to return home.

Abu Saeed, 40, who fled his home in Beit Ewan to escape the Russian bombardment, now lives in a tent along the border in the al-Yamdiya camp. He said Russia's targeting of Turkmen villages in Syria was an attempt to hit back at Turkey. “Yes, we’ve become a scapegoat. And Turkey is trying to make amends by providing food and aid, but this is not a solution. We need to go back home. Turkey should understand this. A tent is never a home,” he said.

Umm Khalid, in a neighboring tent, agreed. "All I dream of is that we go back to our peaceful lives. We are tired of seeing our young men killed," she said. "As for our lives here, I prefer hunger to living in a tent away from home.”

Khaled, a 32-year-old father of two, voiced his concerns. "The number of displaced people in the area is constantly growing," he said. "I worry deeply about the kids who live in the camp, and about my own kids as well."

This article originally appeared on Syria Deeply. For weekly updates about the war in Syria, you can sign up to the Syria Deeply email list.

 

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What Refugees Need In The Winter, And How You Can Help
Tents(01 of06)
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In January, The Washington Post reported that many refugees in a camp in Zahle, Lebanon, lived in flimsy tents prone to collapsing in winter rains and storms. Also in Europe, many migrants and refugees have been forced to wait outdoors -- in many cases, overnight -- for countries' borders to open.

You can donate to the U.N. Refugee Agency, which for $550 can provide an entire family living in Syria's neighboring countries with a tent to shield them from the wind and rain this winter. For $54, the International Rescue Committee will also give four families the materials they need to build temporary shelters in refugee camps around the world.
(credit:Paula Bronstein/Getty Images)
Winter Clothes And Shoes(02 of06)
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In 2015, refugees -- particularly in the Middle East -- experienced a hot summer, and now they're facing a harsh winter. In many photos, people can be seen wearing inadequate clothing, wrapping themselves in blankets and even tying plastic bags around their shoes to avoid the wind and rain. The Guardian noted in Nov. that many people in the "Jungle" refugee camp in Calais, France, wore broken flip-flops or socks under flip-flops.

The International Rescue Committee and UNICEF are both selling winter clothes that can protect displaced children from the cold.
(credit:Ilyas Akengin/AFP/Getty Images)
Blankets(03 of06)
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The Syrian People's Support Association, a Madrid-based nonprofit, is collecting homemade blankets from knitters and crocheters around the world to send to displaced Syrians before the harsh winter hits.

You can reach the organization on Facebook (the group includes English speakers). You can also donate to the International Rescue Committee, which for $84 can provide 15 blankets to people in refugee camps.
(credit:Javier Soriano/AFP/Getty Images)
Space Blankets(04 of06)
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Space blankets are light, low-volume coverings. Their thin, shiny material reflects heat energy, thereby reducing heat loss from the body through thermal radiation. Many refugees and migrants who arrive at Lesbos after their perilous journey across the Aegean Sea have been seen wearing them.

You can buy packs of 10 for under $10 on Amazon and send them to refugee agencies worldwide.
(credit:Matej Divizna/Getty Images)
Water Purification Tablets(05 of06)
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In unsupervised refugee camps, clean drinking water can be hard to find. In early October, researchers working with the Doctors of the World group found both E. coli and Coliform bacteria in a piped water tap in a refugee camp in Calais, France. You can send water purification tablets, which help destroy waterborne diseases when dissolved in water, to camps via UNICEF. (credit:Mario Tama/Getty Images)
Food Aid(06 of06)
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Many refugees in the Middle East skip meals to save money for basic needs, the U.N. Refugee Agency reported last week. Children risk physical and mental damage due to malnutrition, William Lambers, author of the book Ending World Hunger, noted in The Boston Globe this summer.

The U.N. World Food Program and Muslim Aid, which provide food aid to refugees worldwide, are accepting monetary donations. You can also send micronutrient powder, which helps prevent anemia, blindness and brain damage in children, to refugees via UNICEF's website.
(credit:Matt Cardy/Getty Images)

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