Over 25,000 Syrians returned home since Assad’s fall
Turkey is home to nearly three million Syrian refugees
Turkey is home to nearly three million Syrian refugees

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(FILES) Syrians who live in Turkey wait in a queue at Cilvegozu crossborder gate before entering in Syria at Reyhanli district in Hatay, on December 9, 2024. More than 25,000 Syrians have returned home from Turkey since Bashar al-Assad was overthrown by Islamist-led HTS rebels, Turkey's interior minister said December 24, 2024.
Ozan KOSE / AFP
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ISTANBUL, Turkey (AFP) — More than 25,000 Syrians have returned home from Turkey since Bashar al-Assad was overthrown by Islamist-led HTS rebels, Turkey’s interior minister said Tuesday.
Turkey is home to nearly three million refugees who fled the civil war that broke out in 2011, and whose presence has been an issue for President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s government.
“The number of people returning to Syria in the last 15 days has exceeded 25,000,” Ali Yerlikaya told the official Anadolu news agency.
Ankara is in close touch with Syria’s new leaders and now focusing on the voluntary return of Syrian refugees, hoping the shift in power in Damascus will allow many of them to return home.
Yerlikaya said a migration office would be established in the Turkish embassy and consulate in Damascus and Aleppo so that the records of returning Syrians could be kept.
Turkey reopened its embassy in Damascus, nearly a week after Assad was toppled by forces backed by Ankara, and 12 years after the diplomatic outpost was shuttered early in Syria’s civil war.
Yerlikaya said one person from each family will be given the right to enter and exit three times from 1 January to July 2025 under regulations to be drafted upon Erdogan’s instructions.
Syrians returning to their country will be able to take their belongings and cars with them, he added.
Meanwhile, Syria’s new leaders announced Tuesday that they had reached an agreement with the country’s rebel groups on their dissolution and integration under the defense ministry.
Absent from the meeting were representatives of the United States-backed, Kurdish-led forces that control swathes of Syria’s northeast.
The meeting between the rebel groups and Syria’s new leader Ahmed al-Sharaa “ended in an agreement on the dissolution of all the groups and their integration under the supervision of the ministry of defense,” said a statement carried by the SANA news agency and the authorities’ Telegram account.