Syrian refugees in Turkey to exceed 5 million in 2028
[2023-06-16 12:05:11]
Turkey gave the Syrians temporary protection status of 3,545,293, and the number of Syrians living in refugee camps decreased to 204,288, Hürriyet reported daily data from Immigration Bureau and Ombudsman Institution It is.
While Sanliou has 470,000 Syrians, Istanbul is 564,189 people and the most populous province in Syria. Gaziantep is 391,000, Adana 222,000, Bursa 152,000, Izmir 130,000, Kilis 130,000 and Mardin 92,000. In these seven provinces, the number of Syrians exceeds 10% of the total population.
In Kiris, the number of Syrians is equivalent to 95% of the local population. In Hatay the percentage is 28%, Şanlıurfa 23%, Gaziantep 19%, Adana 10% and Mardin and Mersin 11%.
The number of male Syrians in Turkey is 1,922,410 and the number of women is 1,622,883. Half of them, 1,666,524 people are children and young people. The number of babies (hayers) who are still stateless and under the age of 4 is 535,826. The number of Syrians over 80 years old is 10,483, but the number of Syrians over 90 years old is 1,599.
In the framework of the Immigration Agreement with the European Union, European countries received 15,046 Syrians from Turkey. Germany received 5,538, the Netherlands 2,884, France 2,240 and Finland 1,030 Syria. From 2014 to 2018, 14,314 Syrian refugees settled in third countries. Canada hosted 6,593 Syrians, the US received 3,902, and Norway hosted 1,926.
Since 2013, the number of illegal refugees has steadily increased. The number of illegally passing Turkey in 2013 was 39,890 people, 58,647 people in 2014, 146,485 people in 2015, 174,466 people in 2016, and 175,752 people in 2017. In 2018, 148,637 Syrians were arrested in August
In 2018, Afghans were 59,592 people in 2018, heading the number of illegal cross-border numbers. Approximately 25,516 Syrians, 22,474 Pakistani, 10,467 Iraqis and 2,967 Palestinians followed them.
The number of Palestinian illegal passes is close to 1,000, but this number has increased in 2018.
In the past few years, the number of international protection applications filed by Turkey has also increased. Approximately 65,232 people in Turkey, 66,167 people in 2016 and 112,415 people in 2017 applied for international protection in 2015.
Turkey became the third country to accept international protection application. Approximately 68,685 of these applicants are Iraqis, 31,148 are Afghans, 9,619 are Iranian, and 1,082 are Somali. As of August 2018, the number of foreign residents with residence permission increased to 721, 735 people, of which 70,364 Iraqis, 65,348 Syrians, 49,208 Azerbaijanis, 41,025 Turkmen people, 30,657 people Ozbekers and 30,241 Afghans.
Only five countries - Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan, Iraq and Egypt - generously accept more than 5 million Syrian refugees. Since Turkey is the country that is headed by 7 million Syrian refugees, the Syrians account for 5% of the population. Lebanon is different. 2, accepting about 1 million refugees, occupying less than 25% of the country's population. Logically, this enormous influx places great pressure on these countries to provide basic services and protection to refugees. Turkish refugee refugees are faced with housing shortage, poverty, lack of medical care and education, and of course risk of being forced to return home. This raises the question as to whether Turkey is considered a truly safe country.
According to UNHCR, there are 2 million Syrian refugees, including nearly 2 million children. Turkey is currently the world's largest refugee recipient country with 5 million refugees, half of whom are children. It housed more than 250,000 refugees and established a camp network that spent $ 8 billion, but most refugees live outside refugee camps built by the government. According to a report of Human Rights Watch (8th November 2015), "90 of the 25 refugee camps managed by the Turkish government, about 90% of Syrian school-age children regularly attended school Most Syrian children in Turkey live outsid