UN warns over refused Syrian refugees
GENEVA - Agence France-Presse
Returning refugees to Turkey only adds to the challenges, says UN. AP photo
The U.N.’s refugee agency said Nov. 15 it was alarmed by reports that Greece and Bulgaria were turning back Syrians fleeing their war-ravaged homeland, forcing them to return to overloaded Turkey.“Push-backs and prevention of entry can put asylum-seekers at further risk and expose them to additional trauma,” United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) spokesman Adrian Edwards told reporters, saying that all states must cease such practices immediately.
Edwards said the agency was particularly worried about a group of 150 Syrians, including families with children, barred Nov. 12 from entering Greece at Evros, on the border with Turkey. “UNHCR received information from villagers of the group being detained and transported in police vehicles to an unknown location, although they have not been transferred to a reception center. “Their current whereabouts is unknown to us,” he said, adding that there were fears they had been sent back to Turkey.
In Bulgaria, UNHCR was seeking more information from the authorities about 100 people reportedly denied entry last weekend amid bolstered border security. “Introducing barriers, like fences or other deterrents, may lead people to undertake more dangerous crossings and further place refugees at the mercy of smugglers,” Edwards said.
And in the Turkish Cyprus, there were reports that Syrians arriving by boat were being detained and sent to Turkey.
Call for global moratorium
More than 2.2 million Syrians have fled their homeland since the civil war erupted in March 2011, and the vast majority have headed to neighboring Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan and Iraq.
The U.N. repeatedly has called on other nations to help Syria’s neighbors shoulder the burden, and Edwards underlined that Turkey alone had taken in at least 500,000. “UNHCR is calling for a global moratorium on any return of Syrians to neighboring countries,” said Edwards, adding it would be a “concrete gesture of solidarity.”
“Returning Syrian refugees to Turkey or other neighboring countries only adds to the challenges faced by these governments and local communities to support and provide assistance to refugees,” he said.