Friday, March 29, 2024
HomeNEWSWORLD NEWSMerkel visits Syrian refugees in Turkey

Merkel visits Syrian refugees in Turkey

German Chancellor Angela Merkel visited a refugee camp on the Turkish-Syrian border Saturday, kicking off a high-stakes visit aimed at boosting a month-old migrant deal plagued by moral and legal concerns.
Merkel, joined by European Council head Donald Tusk and European Commission Vice President Frans Timmermans, headed to the Nizip 2 camp near Gaziantep after touching down in the country’s south-east.
“Welcome to Turkey, the world’s largest refugee hosting country,” read a huge banner hanging over the entrance to the camp, which hosts some 5,000 people, including 1,900 children, in row upon row of white and beige prefabricated houses.
 

 

 

 

The aim of the visit is to promote the six-billion-euro ($6.7 billion) deal to return migrants arriving on Greek shores to Turkey, which has come under fire from rights groups, the UN refugee agency and some EU leaders.

The European leaders are keen to show how funds are helping Turkey improve conditions for the 2.7 million refugees the country is hosting — though critics have pointed out the majority live in poverty far from the official camps.
Security for the visit was high: the delegation arrived at the camp on a coach with snipers on the roof. Police had earlier arrested six people suspected of links to the Islamic State group accused of plotting an attack.
Merkel met some of the camp’s younger residents as she inaugurated an EU-funded child protection centre, bending to praise the drawings of several children armed with colouring pencils in a brightly-decorated classroom, before receiving presents and kisses from other youngsters.

 

Fraught ties

 

Ties between Germany and Turkey are strained following President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s warning that the deal to curb the migrant flow to Europe would fall through if the EU did not keep up its end of the bargain by allowing visa-free travel for Turkish citizens.
The bloc promised to present a visa recommendation on May 4 if Ankara complies with its side of the accord, but there has been growing unease in Europe over fears that security concerns are being fudged to fast-track Turkey’s application.
US President Barack Obama on Saturday hailed Merkel’s “courageous” leadership in handling the Syrian refugee crisis.
The success of the deal, which has sharply reduced the number of people crossing from Turkey to Greece, was also called into question, with the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) saying the numbers were “once again ticking up”.
Merkel had said the Turkey visit was a chance to take stock of the implementation of the migrant deal and discuss the next steps, as well as evaluate conditions on the ground for those who have fled the devastating five-year war in Syria.
Angela Merkel was accompanied by the President of the EU Council, Donald Tusk, the EU Deputy Comissioner Frans Timmermans and Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu as she visited the nearly 10,000 Syrian migrants at the Nizip 1 camp.
 

 

 

 

 

Refugee schools, hospitals

 

“We have schools and hospitals, life is good here,” Mohamed Tomos, 49, who fled Damascus with his wife and four children and now lives with them in Nizip 2, told AFP.
“But we want to know what our future holds. If the war ended today, tomorrow I would go to Syria,” he said.
The leaders will wind up the visit with a joint press conference with Turkey’s Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu.
Many in Europe will be watching closely to see if the delegation takes a stand against the deterioration of rights.
 

 

Source: AFP,Reuters, dpa, 23 April 2016

RELATED ARTICLES

Selected

Latest News and Articles

Most Viewed

[custom-twitter-feeds]