ANKARA: More than 50,000 Syrian refugees have left Turkey to return home since Bashar al-Assad’s ouster. But for many others living in the country, the thought raises a host of worrying questions.
In Altindag, a northeastern suburb of Ankara home to many Syrians, Radigue Muhrabi, who has a newborn and two other children, said she could not quite envisage going back to Syria “where everything is so uncertain”.
“My husband used to work with my father at his shoe shop in Aleppo but it was totally destroyed. We don’t know anything about work opportunities nor schools for the kids,” she said.
After the civil war began in 2011, Syria’s second city was badly scarred by fighting between the rebels and Russian-backed regime forces.
Even so, daily life in Turkey has not been easy for the Syrian refugees who have faced discrimination, political threats of expulsion and even physical attacks.
In August 2021, an angry mob smashed up shops and cars thought to belong to Syrians in Altindag as anti-migrant sentiment boiled over at a time of deepening economic insecurity in Turkey.
Basil Ahmed, a 37-year-old motorcycle mechanic, recalled the terror his two young children experienced when the mob smashed the windows of their home.
Even so, he said he was not thinking of going straight back.
– ‘Not the same Syria’ –
“We have nothing in Aleppo. Here, despite the difficulties, we have a life,” he said.
“My children were born here, they don’t know Syria.”
As the Assad regime brutally cracked down on the population, millions fled in fear, explained Murat Erdogan, a university professor who specialises in migration.
“Now he’s gone, many are willing to return but the Syria they left is not the same place,” he told AFP.
“Nobody can predict what the new Syrian government will be like, how they will enforce their authority, what Israel will do nor how the clashes (with Kurdish fighters) near the Turkish border will develop,” he said.
“The lack of security is a major drawback.”






