Free Syrian students Union
stated via social media that the Turkish Government would accept the Syrian
Students who got the high school certificate in rebel-held areas under the
supervision of opposition National coalition in its universities and
educational institutions.
Turkey is responding to the needs of tens of thousands of Syrian
refugee, especially the children by providing them with education in their
mother-tongue Arabic, according to World
Bulletin.
Currently there are almost half a million Syrian refugees in
Turkey. Syrian refugee children who already know Turkish have been able to
benefit from public schools in Turkey. However, the Turkish government is now
addressing the problem of Syrian refugee children who don’t know Turkish by
providing them with education in Arabic. Kademoon schools in Istanbul are set
to open on Monday. Already 6000 children have registered.
The government has prepared 55 schools across the country have
been catering for Syrian refugee children in Turkey. They have employed Syrian
school teachers to teach the children in their own language. Of these 55
schools, three of them are found in Istanbul’s Zeytinburnu, Bagcilar and
Esenler, with 2000 students each.
Alongside the government, the
Syrian Education Services and Consultation Association has been working to
secure the right to education for Syrian living in Turkey since July 2012.
Having come toTurkey with his family from Syria thirty years ago, the head of
the association Ola Baghajati Ragipoglu said that last year the association
recruited 1000 students, and that in the coming years they aiming for a
ten-fold increase.
Commenting on the children’s progress, Ragipoglu said ‘’At first
they were all drawing pictures of guns, injuries, blood and ruined buildings.
By the end of the year this changed. We want to give these children the right
to say ‘how lucky we are for Turkey looking after us’. They will be our future
ambassadors in improving Syrian-Turkish relations.’’
Speaking to Turkey’s Zaman newspaper, Syrian refugee child Yasir
Hellaf, 6, said ‘I love Turkey but when the war ends I want to turn back to my
country. We ran away from the sound of bombs and guns. We went to Egypt but
then war broke out there. Now I am very excited to be starting school
here.’
Syria's conflict began in March 2011 largely as peaceful protests
against Assad's rule. It escalated into a civil war after opposition supporters
took up arms to fight a brutal government crackdown on dissent.
More than 200,000 people have been killed in the conflict,
according to Syrian Human rights NGO's and 2 million Syrians, including one
million children, have been forced to flee to neighboring countries, the United
Nations says.
Zaman Alwasl
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