Syrian refugees walk along their tents at a refugee camp in the Turkish border
Damascus - AFP
The number of Syrians taking refuge at tent cities in Turkey has decreased to 11,122 after several hundred people went back home, Turkish officials said Monday.
"On June 26-27, 375 of those who had crossed
to our country returned home of their own free will, while another 39 Syrian citizens were admitted in," the emergency situations agency said on its website.
The statement said 51 people, including 15 with gunshot wounds, remained in hospital.
The Turkish authorities continue to provide food to those who remain camping in squalid conditions on the Syrian side of the border, it added.
On Saturday, the head of the Syrian Red Crescent called on refugees to return home, insisting that they would not face retribution or interrogation, Anatolia news agency reported.
"We, as the Red Crescent, guarantee that the Syrian government will not call (the refugees) to account and under no circumstances will security forces take decisions about them," Abdurrahman Attar told Turkish reporters in Damascus, according to Anatolia.
"With the comprehensive amnesty declared, they would not be interrogated," he said, referring to President Bashar al-Assad's announcement of a general amnesty last week.
Attar said he was awaiting Ankara's permission to visit the refugee camps in the Turkish border province of Hatay to talk to Syrians who may want to return.
Some 1,500 people poured into Turkey Thursday in one of the largest single waves so far after Syrian troops backed by tanks entered a border zone where thousands fleeing a bloody crackdown on anti-regime protesters had massed but hesitated to cross to Turkey.
Syrian troops pushed towards the Lebanese border as they pressed a deadly crackdown in central towns ahead of Monday's opposition meeting in Damascus on the country's unrest, activists said.
The latest violence in Kseir, near the flashpoint city of Homs, forced "hundreds" of people to flee over the border into Lebanon, the activists said.
The exodus came as Turkey, where about 12,000 Syrians have already taken refuge in recent weeks, scrambled to erect a border tent city to accommodate a possible new influx of refugees.
Rami Abdel Rahman, who heads the London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, told AFP in Nicosia that shots rang out in Kseir -- 15 kilometres (nine miles) from the border with Lebanon, and in Homs.
He said on Saturday, "hundreds of residents fled from Kseir to Lebanon."
Four civilians were shot dead by security forces on Saturday, two in Kseir and two in Kiswah, south of the capital.
Activists say that security forces have bolstered their presence in Kseir since Friday, while troops have been controlling areas of Homs for several days, as part of a policy to crush pro-democracy protests.
The sweep against the opponents of the autocratic regime of President Bashar al-Asad has also seen troops backed by tanks storm villages near the border with Turkey.
French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe said Sunday that Assad had passed the "point of no return.
"I would be happy to admit I'm wrong, but I don't think so," he he told France's RTL radio.
"I regret that the repression continues to unfold in conditions which calls into question the region's security, because we have reached more than 10,000 refugees in Turkey...," Juppe added.
On Saturday, tanks rumbled into Al-Najia, after similar operations in Jisr al-Shughur, seized on June 12, and Khirbet al-Joz, where troops deployed on Thursday, according to activists.
Pro-government daily Al-Watan said Khirbet al-Joz was used as a "key crossing for armed groups from and to the Turkish" border. The army was "now cleansing" the village of any armed presence, securing roads and protecting residents.
And state news agency SANA said families were returning from Turkey to Jisr al-Shughur on Sunday for the second day in a row.
"Almost 730 people have returned... They had fled from the terror of the terrorist groups in the region," it said.
In Lebanon, however, a village headman said that hundreds of people, mostly Lebanese living in Syria, had sought safe haven in the northern Akkar region over the weekend.
Around 350 to 400 people streamed into Kuneissat on Friday and Saturday, said the headman of the Lebanese border village, Ali Hammud, adding that most came from Al-Hit and Dweik villages and some from Kseir.
Anti-government protests in Syria swelled on Friday with tens of thousands of people surging onto the streets in response to Syrian Revolution 2011 -- a Facebook group and driving force behind three months of demonstrations.
Security forces used live ammunition and tear gas against the protesters, killing 18 people and wounding scores more, activists told AFP. Funerals were held on Saturday for the victims.
Opposition figures are due to meet in Damascus on Monday on ways to solve the crisis which has gripped Syria since mid-March.
"We will talk so that we can formulate a national strategy on how to end Syria's current crisis," Abdel Karim Rihawi, president of the Syrian League for Human Rights, told AFP.
But the one-day grouping of more than 100 independents, with no ties to political parties, will not take the place of "protesters in the street," the rights activist stressed.
Anwar Bunni, a prominent rights lawyer who has spent five years in Syrian jail, played up its significance as "a first meeting of its kind at a public venue announced in advance."
The opposition will only take part in a "national dialogue" as proposed by the authorities if peaceful demonstrations are authorised, political prisoners are released, the opposition recognised and the use of force halted, he told AFP.
Syria's military spokesman Major General Riad Haddad, quoted on CNN, said 1,300 members of the security forces have been killed in the revolt, in attacks which the authorities have blamed on "armed gangs."
According to the Syrian Observatory, 1,342 civilians have been killed in the government's crackdown and 342 security force personnel have also died.
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All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
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