Turkish aid for displaced Syrians

BBC's Matthew Price

The BBC’s Matthew Price says residents of Bdama have fled to the Turkish border as that is where they feel safest

Turkey is for the first time supplying food across the border to people displaced within Syria as the Syrian army tightens its grips on restive areas in the north of the country.

Syrian forces have cut off the village of Bdama and closed its bakery, the only source of bread for thousands.

Witnesses say Syrian forces have set up checkpoints and are making arrests.

Turkey says more than 10,500 people have crossed over to its territory but more are camping on the Syrian side.

“Distribution of humanitarian aid has begun to meet the urgent food needs of Syrian citizens waiting on the Syrian side of our border,” Turkey’s emergency situations agency said in a statement on Sunday, the AFP news agency reported.

Analysis

The number of people living here, squeezed up along the Syrian Turkish border, has been growing. Over the weekend, more people have come to this particular camp from the town of Bdama, which Syrian forces went into early on Saturday morning.

I have spoken to a number of people here who have described hearing shots being fired in the town. One man said that while the army was in the town, it had tried to reassure people that they were indeed safe. Then he said that he knew of a number of people who had gone back to Bdama, believing the words of the soldiers, and they had then been arrested.

So it is clearly, as far as the people here are concerned, a very frightening situation and they are living out here among the fig trees and the olive groves, out under the baking sun during the day in makeshift camps.

They all say they don’t know when they will return to their homes.

Activists said the army had surrounded Bdama with checkpoints and was stopping people attempting to flee towards the border.

Nonetheless, hundreds have managed to escape and are living in makeshift camps on the Syrian side.

The local Turkish governor’s office said some Syrians were collecting food at the border to take to the stranded families, the Associated Press reported. The governor’s office said there was no question of Turkish soldiers crossing into Syria.

Raka el-Abdu, 23, told AFP that his family fled Bdama on Saturday but he went back on Sunday morning to get bread. He reached the village using mountain routes and found it all but abandoned.

“They closed the only bakery there. We cannot get bread any more,” he said. “I saw soldiers shooting the owner of the bakery. They hit him in the chest and the leg.

“The army is controlling all the entrances to the village and checking identities to arrest protesters,” he added.

Turkey has condemned the crackdown by Syrian President Bashar al-Assad on a three-month-old uprising by protesters demanding greater openness and an end to corruption.

Good relations between the Turkish government and President Assad have been severely strained by the crisis.

The UN says that at least 1,100 people have died since protests began, but Syrian rights groups put the overall death toll in Syria at 1,297 civilians and 340 security force members.

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has sent its president to Syria for talks about the humanitarian crisis.

ICRC president Jakob Kellenberger has repeatedly asked Syria to grant the ICRC and the Syrian Red Crescent access to those wounded or detained.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *