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In Pictures

Gallery|Refugees

Syrian refugees mass at Turkish border

Thousands of people are stranded at the Bab al-Salam crossing after fleeing a government offensive in Aleppo.

Refugees on Turkish- Syrian border/ Please Do Not Use
A worker walks through the Turkish border town of Oncupinar at sunset. Only ambulances and some special vehicles are being allowed to cross from Syria into Turkey. [Diego Ibarra Sanchez / MeMo / Al Jazeera]
By Diego Ibarra Sanchez
Published On 28 Feb 201628 Feb 2016
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Time stands frozen for thousands of Syrian refugees running from war. They have fled Aleppo and are desperately trying to enter Turkey, which has shut its border, claiming it is unable to absorb any more refugees. Only ambulances and some special vehicles are allowed to make the Bab al-Salam crossing.

The humanitarian crisis in Syria, which has been in the throes of war for nearly five years, has reached a peak. A Syrian government offensive in Aleppo has displaced tens of thousands of people, many of whom are now massing in camps at the Turkish border.

From time to time, the silence at the border is broken by the sounds of ambulances and explosions within Syria. A queue of aid trucks snakes towards the crossing, preparing to deliver items such as food, water and blankets.

Thousands of other internally displaced Syrians have been seeking shelter in the border town of Azaz.

“The situation in Azaz is miserable. People sleep on the ground. A 40-year-old man died during a cold snap on the streets. [Aid agencies are] sending more tents each day, but there are a lot of people,” activist Abu Mohamed told Al Jazeera. “This current situation demands urgent international intervention … The world has abandoned us.”

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Refugees on Turkish- Syrian border/ Please Do Not Use
A young Syrian looks out of a bus window in Oncupinar,Turkey. The United Nations has urged Turkey to open its borders to tens of thousands of Syrians who have fled government bombings in Aleppo. [Diego Ibarra Sanchez / MeMo / Al Jazeera]
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Refugees on Turkish- Syrian border/ Please Do Not Use
The IHH humanitarian relief agency has been providing displaced people with shelter, food, water and blankets in Syria. [Diego Ibarra Sanchez / MeMo / Al Jazeera]
Refugees on Turkish- Syrian border/ Please Do Not Use
Many Syrians are trapped between Russian bombers and the closed Turkish border. [Diego Ibarra Sanchez / MeMo / Al Jazeera]
Refugees on Turkish- Syrian border/ Please Do Not Use
Syrian refugees line up at the border in Oncupinar to cross back into Syria. They will not be allowed to return to Turkey, and their ID cards will be destroyed as soon as they cross back. [Diego Ibarra Sanchez / MeMo / Al Jazeera]
Refugees on Turkish- Syrian border/ Please Do Not Use
A group of Syrians play a traditional Syrian game at a car park in the Turkish border town of Oncupinar. [Diego Ibarra Sanchez/MeMo/Al Jazeera]
Refugees on Turkish- Syrian border/ Please Do Not Use
Two injured Syrians rest inside the Syrian hospital complex in the Turkish city of Kilis. [Diego Ibarra Sanchez/MeMo/Al Jazeera]
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Refugees on Turkish- Syrian border/ Please Do Not Use
Elbeyli camp, located in southern Kilis in Turkey, hosts around 24,000 Syrians. The camp is surrounded by walls and watchtowers. [Diego Ibarra Sanchez/MeMo/Al Jazeera]
Refugees on Turkish- Syrian border/ Please Do Not Use
Syrians gather outside a distribution point at Elbeyli camp. Turkey now hosts the world's largest community of Syrian refugees. [Diego Ibarra Sanchez/MeMo/Al Jazeera]
Refugees on Turkish- Syrian border/ Please Do Not Use
A Syrian woman hangs her clothes inside Elbeyli camp in southern Kilis province. [Diego Ibarra Sanchez/MeMo/Al Jazeera]
Refugees on Turkish- Syrian border/ Please Do Not Use
Syrian children get some exercise inside Elbeyli camp, which is home to about 23,000 Syrian refugees. [Diego Ibarra Sanchez/MeMo/Al Jazeera]
Refugees on Turkish- Syrian border/ Please Do Not Use
Drawings made by Syrian children affected by the war hang on a blackboard inside a school at Elbeyli camp. [Diego Ibarra Sanchez/MeMo/Al Jazeera]
Refugees on Turkish- Syrian border/ Please Do Not Use
A Syrian woman walks through a small forest in Kilis. The city's population has approximately doubled with the influx of Syrian refugees. [Diego Ibarra Sanchez/MeMo/Al Jazeera]


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