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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
World
Caroline Mortimer

Hundreds of Syrian refugees 'threaten with deportation back to Syria'

The refugees were rescued after their boat sank last Tuesday (Petros Giannakouris/AP)

Hundreds of Syrian refugees fear they could be sent back by Turkish authorities after they were rescued by the country’s coastguard.

A total of 22 people drowned when the boat capsized a few miles from the Turkish coast as they tried to reach the Greek island of Kos, while 211 people were rescued and taken to a detention centre in Düziçi, southern Turkey.

According to the Guardian, survivors have said some of the Syrian detainees had been flown to Lebanon.

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A spokesman for Turkish Prime Minister Recep Erdogan denied any refugee would be sent to Syria but survivors say those who cannot afford a flight to Lebanon are being forced to go to the Bab al-Hawa border crossing between Turkey and Syria.

One refugee said: “They are threatening us that Syrians will be deported to Syria, Iraqis to Iraq.

“We are being deported at our cost – whoever doesn’t have the money to go to Beirut airport, they send him to Bab al-Hawa. I don’t know what to say.

“If they send us back to Syria we will die.” The refugee crisis - in pictures

Mr Erdogan’s spokesman, Dogan Eskinat told the Guardian: “All refugees are interviewed by [the UN refugee agency], who make sure that they will not be returned to Syria.

“In general, we have a no-returns policy, so I don’t know where that claim comes from.”

Turkey is one of several east European countries struggling to cope with the influx of refugees escaping Isis and civil war in Syria and Iraq.

4m Syrians are believed to have fled the country according to the UNHCR
since fighting broke out in 2011 with approximately 6.5m more displaced within the country, .
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