The Syrian Observatory For Human Rights

Syrians slowly return to unsafe Ain al-Arab

MURSITPINAR, Turkey: Thousands of people who fled the Syrian town of Ain al-Arab during a four-month battle between Kurdish and ISIS forces are now making their way home, only to find wrecked houses and unexploded bombs littering the streets.

The border town, once home to 200,000 people, was largely destroyed by fighting in which Kurdish defenders held off militant Islamists trying to overrun the area.

Assisted by Iraqi peshmerga forces and almost daily airstrikes by the U.S.-led coalition, the Kurds finally drove out the radical Sunni insurgents in late January and a fragile peace was restored.

Almost the entire population of Ain al-Arab fled across the border to Turkey to escape the fighting, some to refugee camps, others staying with family and friends or heading to Turkey’s cities.

The returning residents’ problems are far from over.

Near the Mursitpinar border crossing, dozens of people were carrying suitcases and bags of food and awaiting security checks before going back to Ain al-Arab, known widely by its Kurdish name Kobani.

One man said he was taking tents to live in as his home had probably been destroyed.

“We have fled to Turkey after ISIS reached to the outskirts of our town. But we have been hoping to get back home. Now that it is liberated, we are on our way back,” said Mohammad Salih, 65, waiting to cross the border to Syria with his family of six.

However, Ain al-Arab official Idris Nasan said 15 people had been killed and many more injured in accidents involving unexploded ordnance since the siege was lifted.

“It’s not safe for them. But they were looking forward to coming back,” he told Reuters by telephone.

Turkey’s largest refugee camp, built for escapees from Ain al-Arab, holds less than one third of its 35,000 capacity, according to Dogan Eskinat, spokesman for Turkey’s disaster management agency AFAD.

“Turkey keeps track of exits as well as entries. The latest figure shows around 4,000 people have gone back to Kobani, he said.

The British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Kurdish forces have regained control of at least 163 villages around Ain al-Arab. But their progress had been slowed by renewed clashes to the west and southwest of the town.

 

 

http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Middle-East/2015/Feb-24/288512-syrians-slowly-return-to-unsafe-ain-al-arab.ashx