¶ … Turkey to address the needs of the Syrian refugees, thereby facilitating the safety of the refugees while ensuring the health of the local Turkish communities.
United Nations leader Ban Ki-moon has described the Syrian Civil War as having reached "appalling heights of brutality," ("UN predicts huge surge in Syrian refugee numbers: AFP"). According to official United Nations counts, more than 460,000 Syrians have fled Syria to find safety, and those numbers are expected to surge to 700,000 by the beginning of 2013. Most of the refugees have crossed over the border to Turkey and also to Jordan, but many others have gone farther -- to North Africa and Europe. With the crisis having already reached epic proportions, and growing bigger, the time for providing a Christian plan of aid is nigh.
There are many options for assisting the refugees. The most pressing is to help Turkey build enough well stocked refugee communities to temporarily provide support and solace. Turkey has taken in 100,000 refugees from Syria (Reynolds). Many of those refugees are crossing at Ceylanpinar, which also happens to have a substantial Kurdish community. "Turkey has long struggled with its Kurdish population, which makes up some 20% of the country," (Krajeski). Therefore, Turkey needs our help in organizing the relief effort. This service project will be designed with total sensitivity to the local Kurdish communities of both Turkey and Syria. Moreover, this project will be sensitive to the political situation vis-a-vis Ankara. After all, Turkey is doing the refugees a great service by allowing them entry; the government and the local border towns need our support.
Geographic Theme: Location
Turkey and Syria share a long border; at over 800 kilometers, it is also the longest land border Turkey shares with any of its eight neighbors (Ozey). Refugee camps for Syrians are dotted along the border, and the Turks are now starting to develop more official refugee camps or communities away from these border towns. Ceylanpinar is one of the easternmost refugee camps in Turkey. The majority of refugee camps are along the western part of the border, closer to the Mediterranean Sea. However, the Turkish government contends with so many refugees that the camps along the border are filled to capacity. This has necessitated the construction of refugee camps farther inland from the border. We believe the new locations for the refugee camps are generally good, because it is somewhat less disruptive for the Turkish people who live in the border towns. However, Turkey has also been forcibly removing Syrian refugees from the homes they legally rented in Turkey (Watson and Tuysuz).
Geographic Theme: Region
Turkey shares borders with Greece, Bulgaria, Georgia, Armenia, Iran, Azerbaijan, Iraq, and Syria. Turkey also has long water borders along the Black Sea and Mediterranean Sea. Because of the centrality of Turkey in the region, it plays a key role in regional political, economic, and social affairs. Turkey's role in the region has centuries of historic precedent, and Turkey's history is intimately linked with that of its neighbors. The Turkish Ottoman Empire defined geopolitical boundaries throughout the region, extending throughout the Balkans as well. Since the demise of the Ottoman Empire Turkey's status has remained relatively strong. "Turkey's tenuous geographical position could also be its good fortune, so long as it stays cool militarily, keeps its border open, continues to pressure the international community to take action in Syria, and remains patient," (Krajeski).
One of the most pressing regional issues with regards to the Syrian refugee crisis is the fact that some of the refugees are Kurds, or are crossing the border in Kurdish territories. When the former Ottoman empire territories were divided into modern nation-states, Iraq, Syria, Kuwait, and modern Turkey were created, among other countries that were formerly under Ottoman rule. Kurdistan was supposed to be one of those countries. "The 1920 Treaty of Sevres, which created the modern states of Iraq, Syria and Kuwait, was to have included the possibility of a Kurdish state in the region. However, it was never implemented," ("Who Are the Kurds?"). Because of this, the 15 to 20 million Kurds have no officially recognized state or homeland. Traditionally nomadic people, the Kurds are persecuted in all of the countries in which their people live: including Turkey, Syria, and Iraq. "Kurds have...
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