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    You are at:Home»Why is the world silent? Syrian refugees speak

    Why is the world silent? Syrian refugees speak

    0
    By Sarah Akel on 20 June 2011 Uncategorized

    By Neil Sammonds, Amnesty International’s Syria researcher on the
    Turkish-Syrian border

    Little is known of the life of the thousands of Syrians who have
    recently fled to Turkey, and are now living in camps in Yayladagi and
    Altinozu in the south-east of the country.

    Not one civil society activist or journalist is known to have been
    able to enter the camps. Knowing that, and with Turkey virtually shut
    down for the national elections today, I chose to head for one of the
    hospitals in the regional capital Hatay where one can sneak in to talk
    to injured Syrians.

    By all accounts, the Turkish government and people have received,
    hosted and treated an unspecified number of Syrians extremely well.
    Officially there are up to 7,000 Syrians now here in Hatay province
    but many believe the actual figure is much higher.

    There are said to be up to 10,000 within a few kilometres of the
    border on the Syrian side, waiting to be able to go back to their
    homes or to cross into Turkey if the violence moves further north.

    Strangely however, the Turkish government is hiding its hospitability
    by denying access to the camps and making it a gamble on getting in to
    see Syrians in hospitals.

    I entered the hospital, walked past the security guard as if I was a
    regular and eventually, in a room with three single beds, I found the
    people I had been looking for.

    These three Syrian men, all from the Jisr al-Shughur area, have been
    wounded in the recent clashes with security forces. I sensed their
    unease each time the door opened but they told me their stories.

    One of them, a 40-year-old farmer from a village 2km from Jisr
    al-Shughur
    who did not want to give his name for security reasons, had
    been shot in the leg by security forces while tending to his land on 4
    June. The army took him to a hospital in the nearby city of Idleb.

    A doctor with tears in his eyes told him he was forbidden to treat
    him. Security forces took him to a military interrogation office
    nearby.

    He was blindfolded, with hands tied tightly behind his back and badly
    beaten with rifle butts and kicks all over his body. The marks are
    visible on his face and all over his body.


    “While they beat me, they asked me if I belonged to the Muslim
    Brotherhood, or if I was on the payroll of [Lebanon’s former Prime
    Minister] Saad Hariri,” he told me.

    An official went through his mobile phone and made a note of all the
    names and numbers on it, and a a high-ranking officer later demanded
    to know the names of the people organizing the protest.

    After thumbprinting papers he didn’t understand as he is illiterate,
    he was released on 7 June and made it across the border to Turkey the
    same day.

    Despite the volatile situation in his home country, he insisted that
    he will go back to Syria. “There’s no more fear,” he added.

    The second man in the room, a 31-year-old building worker from Jebel
    al-Zawyah
    , had been shot in the leg by security forces while taking
    part in the Friday protests on 3 June.

    Thousands of people from neighbouring areas took to the streets on
    that day, he said. Security forces were everywhere – on the road,
    perched on top of buildings. As the protesters approached a youth
    camp, the army suddenly opened fire.

    He fell to the ground and security forces dragged him away to a nearby building.

    “They asked me ‘Who is your god?’ ’Allah’ I said. ’No, say Bashar’
    they said.
    They hit me with a stick on the back of the head and I fell
    down and lost consciousness. They must have thought I was dead and
    left me among some trees,” he said.

    When he came to, the security forces had left and local people took
    him to a hospital in Idleb.

    Like the farmer I spoke to, he said he was interrogated and asked for
    names of other protesters.

    After his release, he reached Turkey where his wound has been treated
    and he now moves on crutches.

    Abu Taha, 29, a Red Crescent ambulance worker from Jisr al-Shughur,
    described to me how he was shot in the back by security forces while
    attending to an injured person in the centre of the town.

    Luckily for him, the bullet passed out on the other side.

    On Saturday 4 June, the funeral for Basel al-Masri was held, he said.
    The town centre was packed with funeral-goers and around midday,
    security forces opened fire on the crowd.

    Many were killed and injured, he said, adding that some people started
    shooting at the army from the roofs of government buildings.

    “It was clear that the snipers were not locals – we all know each
    other in my area. They wore plain clothes with grenade belts on their
    chests. They have to be from the regime to make it look as if there
    are armed groups,“ he said.

    Whoever the men shooting at the army were, the consequences for people
    in the area have been dire. Abu Taha gave a chilling description of
    the fate of some small villages in the area.

    He said that on Friday 10 June, a number of tanks arrived in Kem
    al-Rumanah
    , a small village in the border area with only 50 houses.
    “The tanks fired at the houses; once they were destroyed, some 300
    shabiha militia soldiers entered. They killed or kidnapped anyone left
    behind, stole any possessions they could and burnt crops. They have
    done this in several villages,“ he said.

    “Does the rest of the world want the end of the Syrian people? Why is
    the world silent?” he asked me repeatedly.

    Several other Syrians came in and out of the room while I was there.
    They all spoke of Syrians being united and peaceful, with only the
    regime wanting divisions between communities.

    Amnesty International

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