Syrian refugees join meteorite search in eastern Turkey

Syrian refugees join meteorite search in eastern Turkey

BİNGÖL - Anadolu Agency

AA photo

Syrian refugees in Turkey have joined the search for meteorite fragments in the eastern province of Bingöl.

In Sarıçiçek, a village 5 km (3 miles) east of the provincial capital, Bingöl, showers of extra-terrestrial rocks fell early September.

After hearing rumors that researchers and academics were keen to collect the small meteorites, villagers have been gathering them day and night.

The area draws hundreds of locals and foreigners after reports that the meteorites, whether for research or collectors, cost between $20 and $60 per gram.

Around 40 families of Syrians living in the Diyarbakır, Şanlıurfa and Kilis provinces, arrived in the area nearly a week ago, in hopes of finding meteorites that have fallen from the skies.

Several Syrians, most living in makeshift tents, entertain the dream of making money from the stones, which they described as a “gift from God.”

Abbas Mosa Hemo, from the Syrian province of Raqqa, told Anadolu Agency on Nov. 22 that he came with his family to search for the meteorites.

“We have come to seek the stone God has sent as a gift,” said Hemo, adding they had only been able to find two meteorites despite all their efforts.

Another Syrian, Shaban Hemo, who fled the Syrian city of Aleppo and now lives in a two-room home in the southeastern province of Diyarbakır, said he had not found a single meteorite despite a three-day search.

“It is said ‘this stone [meteorite] is very precious, worth money, go and search them’. If I find any, I will build a house with that money when we return to Syria,” he said.

Muslum Sefer, another refugee from the Syrian town of Kobane that was the scene of fierce clashes between the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) and Kurdish fighters, said he came to Bingöl four days ago to find a meteorite.

“I came here with three or four friends of mine. One friend and I found one meteorite each; they offered $300 for them, but we declined, as we learnt that higher prices are offered in Istanbul,” Sefer said.

Sefer said he also planned to buy a home with the income from the stones they found.

Ali Halil Hemo said his house in Syria had been decimated in clashes and he also wanted to build a new one if he made money with the meteorites.

“We, as family, came to the village after learning that a precious stone fell in Bingöl; it is holy and precious as it came from the sky and everyone is striving to find this stone,” Halil Hemo added.

Ozan Ünsalan, an associate professor at Istanbul University’s science faculty, has created a website to gather information about the meteorites.

On Nov. 16, he said the shards found around Sarıçiçek were part of 4Vesta, one of the largest asteroids in the solar system, and were considered precious among the scientific community.

Last week, Finance Minister Mehmet Şimşek took to Twitter to ask Turkish users whether they thought the meteorites sold in Sarıçiçek were taxable.

More than 28,000 Twitter users replied to the minister’s questions. The majority said the income should not be taxed.