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Horror but little shock as transgender refugee feared dead after deportation to Syria

Horror but little shock as transgender refugee feared dead after deportation to Syria
Vulnerable refugees living legally and under protection in Turkey are being swept up in the widespread deportation campaign to devastating effect.
3 min read
23 August, 2019
Those supporting pro-refugee politics in Turkey are now in the minority [Getty]

Alarming stories of terror and heartbreak continue to surface amid Turkey’s ruthless campaign to deport thousands of refugees back to Syria’s Idlib province, which faces a deadly daily bombardment of airstrikes by Russian and regime forces.

Among them is the uncertain fate of a transgender woman deported from Istanbul despite living there legally with the correct papers and being under special UNHCR protection for LGBT refugees, the Guardian on Friday.

The woman, who was arrested when hospital staff reported her to the authorities as she sought medical help for her sick boyfriend, was detained in an all-male cell and deported before her legal aid counsellor was able to reach her.

Read more: Why is once refugee-friendly Turkey now turning its back on Syrians?

She had barely gone 100 metres across the border when she was arrested by officers from Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), the militant Islamist group which controls most of Idlib province, according to a fellow refugee deported on the same bus.

The officers went through her phone, humiliating her about her pictures with other men, according to the witness.

She has not been heard from since she was seen forced into the boot of a taxi, a bag tied over her head.

She had voiced certainty while at the deportation centre in Turkey that HTS, an al-Qaeda affiliate, would kill her if she went back.

Deportations 'a huge concern' for all Syrian refugees

The woman is just one of thousands of Syrians returned to war-torn Idlib since the campaign was waged on July 12.

The deportations are “a huge, huge concern” for Syrians in Turkey, according to Elizabeth Tsurkov, Research Fellow at the Forum for Regional Thinking, adding that the crackdown encompasses refugees who have been living legally in Turkey. 

“Nearly all those being deported in Turkey are those that carry documents. They have temporary protection papers, kimlik, and they’re being arrested,” Tsurkov told °®Âþµº.

Tsurkov has also been following the case of a transgender refugee deported to Syria, who could be the same person featured in the Guardian report. However she hasn’t had confirmation yet if they were arrested upon entering Idlib.

The deportations are spurred by the changing political climate in Turkey, as the ruling AKP party adopt forceful anti-refugee policies after losing the Istanbul mayoral election.

In recent years, public opinion has turned against the party’s previously generous policies towards the estimated 3.5 million Syrian refugees in Turkey.

Only refugees wanted by the HTS authorities will be arrested on their return, the rest are simply “subjected to the horrifying living conditions in Idlib” said Tsurkov. 

Idlib residents still 'desperate to leave'

Idlib, the shrinking final pocket of opposition control suffers a devastating daily bombing campaigns carried out by Russia and the Syrian regime.

According to Tsurkov, other refugees are returned to northern Aleppo, an area under direct Turkish control. It is relatively safer, as there are no airstrikes. However the area has problems with criminality is occasionally attacked by the Kurdish YPG militia operating in northern Syria.

Read more: Fortress Europe is drowning in refugee and migrant blood

However in Idlib, the situation is so bad, tales of deportations act as little deterrent.

“People are ignoring what’s happening in Turkey. They know what’s happening, but they are desperate to leave,” said Tsurkov.

“The situation there is catastrophic,” she added. “Many people who are inside Idlib would flee if they had the opportunity.”

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