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‘All is gone, just like Kobane’

Kurdish families who fled fighting in Kobane want to return home.

More than 190,000 Syrians from Kobane have escaped to neighbouring Turkey. 

By Rabii Kalboussi

Published On 12 Jan 201512 Jan 2015

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As they watch US-led coalition jets bomb positions of Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) in the outskirts of Syria’s Kurdish town of Kobane, Kurdish families who escaped from the conflict to Turkey cling to the hope that one day they will be able to return home.

In September, ISIL intensified the fight for control of the town and the surrounding Kurdish villages, prompting the exodus of thousands of Kurds into the southern Turkish town of Suruc.

Most of the refugees now live in camps, struggling to feed their children who have no access to formal education.

As air temperature keeps dropping, refugees – who depend on charity groups for aid – say they are unable to keep their children warm so far from home.

Ali, 34, who spent the last five years in Morocco working as a well digger, said the family house he recently built in Kobane was destroyed in the ISIL offensive.

“I sacrificed five years of my life to come back later to Kobane and settle down. Now my life has turned into rubble, just like my house. I was supposed to get married this month but now, it’s all gone, just like Kobane.”

Some of the Syrian Kurds who escaped Kobane have continued their journey onto Iraq(***)s semi-autonomous Kurdish region. 
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Most of the camps in Suruc are run by Kurdish People(***)s Protection [PYD] an off-shoot of the Kurdistan Workers Party [PKK]. 
The majority of refugees who fled Kobane, left everything behind.
Since they left Kobane, children in the camps have been cut off from formal education. 
Refugees say their situation in Suruc is deteriorating. 
Sixty-year-old Mohamed Sheikh Mohamed says he was shot by an ISIL fighter as he was escaping fierce fighting in Kobane.
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Many Kurds say the US-led air strikes filled them with hope that they will one day be able to return home. 
Most of the refugees say once Kobane is freed, they will build a new town next to it and leave the rubble to history.
Syrian Kurds say they have no interest in staying on in Suruc or elsewhere in Turkey as they feel unwelcome.

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