Paris Attacks Exacerbate Refugee Crisis
From Christian Aid Mission (www.christianaid.org) -- For Immediate Release
Contact: Amie Cotton APR, +1 (434) 327-1240, Amie@christianaid.org
CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA (ANS-- Dec. 8, 2015)
-- The Islamic State's Nov. 13 terrorist attacks in Paris have further
squeezed indigenous Christian ministries serving refugees in the Middle
East, as officials in some European countries have called for shutting
their doors to Syrians.
None
of the terrorists who killed 130 people in Paris have been identified
as Syrians, though one had apparently stolen the passport of a Syrian
migrant. The Belgian suspected of organizing the operation and five
French citizens reportedly involved in the attacks were Muslim
extremists from Europe, though they had traveled to Syria, presumably to
make contact with Islamic State (ISIS) leaders.
Insecurity following the attacks, combined with reports (http://www.christianaid.org/News/2015/mir20151008.aspx)
of ISIS recruiting from among Syrian refugees and infiltrating refugee
camps, has led European countries to tighten controls on refugee flows,
though the vast majority of migrants are families, women, children and
the elderly who are themselves victims of ISIS and other war-related
violence.
“The
violence we saw in Paris is violence that people in Syria are fleeing,”
Joel Charny, an official at Inter Action, an umbrella group for aid
organizations, recently told National Public Radio. “We're not helping
terrorists. We're helping vulnerable people. It's the perpetrators of
the violence in Syria that are driving people to flee. Let's not punish
the victims.”
As
word has spread among refugees of greater difficulty in crossing
European borders, the Middle Eastern countries that were “already at the
breaking point ,” according to a United Nations official, are seeing
their refugee crises expand – as are the ministries providing relief.
“The
Paris attack has affected us in Jordan very much,” said the director of
one ministry serving refugees. “And it has affected the refugees
themselves, because now they have lost hope of going to Europe and
starting their lives there.”
Before
the Paris attacks, most Syrian refugees (more than 4 million) had gone
to neighboring countries like Jordan, Turkey and Lebanon, compared with
only 700,000 going to European countries – chiefly Germany, Sweden and
Serbia, according to online news site vox.com.
While
the number of refugees leaving Turkey for Europe has gone down,
according to the director of a ministry native to Turkey, the number of
refugees fleeing to Turkey has not diminished, especially as Russian
airstrikes supposed to be directed at ISIS have driven out more Syrians.
“Those
countries in the middle of Europe have closed their doors to receive
refugees, and the news is being spread around in the camps here,” he
said. “So they are choosing to stay in Turkey. Also, now the opportunity
to sail by boat to other countries is becoming more difficult for them,
due to the agreement between the Turkish and European governments over
the past few months, so those choosing to leave Turkey have slowed down
considerably.”
Refugees
who have tried to flee are doubling back, he said, further burdening
indigenous ministries that Christian Aid Mission assists. Christian Aid
assists five ministries in Turkey as well as 16 in the Middle East
providing aid while sharing the love of Christ to refugees and displaced
families in Syria.
“This
has increased the need for our help, because a number of families sold
all their possessions or gave them away, saying, 'We're going to
Europe,' but then they were sent back and are now having to find needed
possessions again,” he said. “This is particularly the case with those
who tried to enter Europe by boat. They may have left from Izmir [in
western Turkey], but then returned to the north on the Black Sea, where
we are serving them. They need tents, heating devices, and all the other
needs for survival.”
Leading
churches in Samsun and other sites along the Black Sea, the ministry
director said the refugees are also testing the young Christian
fellowships, where Arabic-speaking or Kurdish-speaking Syrians have few
means to explain that they do not constitute a threat.
“Although
[Turkish] brothers and sisters don't say it openly, they hold back from
being friendly to the refugees coming for aid from us,” he said. “One
can sense that the refugees themselves are feeling judged and looked
over as though they may be affiliated with ISIS and are dangerous. This
makes them feel ashamed, when really they want to be connected but can't
make that clear to the church members.”
Many
Turks were wary of hiring Syrians or renting apartments to them even
before the Paris attacks, and the refugees are even more vulnerable and
in need of aid now, he said.
“With
your help in sending finances, we are providing the best we can for
those who come,” he said. “We will not back down from helping these
needy people. And our hope is in the God who turns evil into good, and
does miracles to turn the hearts of mankind from terror to searching for
God's goodness. There are people having experienced the terror of ISIS
who come to me saying, 'I want to be a Christian.'“
In
Spain, which agreed in September to accept 15,000 Syrian refugees with
larger contingents to come next year, the director of a ministry
providing relief echoed the Turkish ministry director's challenges.
“Now
they cannot leave Spain to France and Germany, so our job is bigger,”
he said. “Also we need prayer, because some Christian leaders decided
not to work with them because they are afraid, but my team is ready to
do what is necessary.”
For more information, click here: http://www.christianaid.org/News/2015/mir20151126.aspx , where you can find more information on how you can help with this situation.
Photo
Captions: 1) Families fleeing terrorism and war in Syria are facing
unfounded suspicions of being terrorists themselves. (Credit: Christian
Aid Mission). 2) Syrians in a refugee camp in Adana, Turkey are
presenting greater needs as their numbers grow. (Credit: Christian Aid
Mission)
Christian Aid Mission (http://www.christianaid.org)
is an evangelical missionary organization based in Charlottesville,
Virginia, that assists indigenous missionary ministries overseas through
prayer, advocacy and financial support. Since 1953, Christian Aid
Mission has identified, evaluated and assisted more than 1,500
ministries in more than 130 countries that are reaching the unreached
for Christ in areas of the world where there is no witness for Christ,
where Christians suffer from poverty or persecution, or where foreign
missionaries are not allowed.
** You may republish this or any of our ANS stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net)
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