Aller au contenu principal

How a Turkish neighbourhood adapted to its Syrian refugees

Basmane is no longer a pit-stop for Syrian refugees: it's become a home

Izmir is Turkey’s third-largest city and plays host to a significant number of the estimated 2.7m Syrian refugees now living in the country. The city has hosted refugees for a long time, and during the 1990s and 2000s it was a particularly important destination for Iraqis and Afghans. But since the war in Syria began in spring 2011, its Syrian population has increased significantly.

While many Syrians have made Izmir their home, the city is also a natural stopping point on the way to Greece, a mere 8km across the Aegean Sea. During the summer and autumn of 2015, Izmir became one of the most important transit points for those hoping to reach Europe via the Greek islands. More than 850,000 people made the crossing, around half of them Syrian.

Izmir’s Basmane district came to the world’s attention as one of the main transit points for people in search of protection and a better life. It was a place to meet the smugglers, whose offer of a trip in an overcrowded rubber dinghy offered at least some hope for the future. Images of its shops selling hundreds of orange life vests alongside tailored suits grabbed the public’s imagination. New hotels, boarding houses, cafes and shops popped up, all providing much-needed services to Syrian refugees as they waited to make the crossing.

But in recent months, everything has changed.

The EU has now signed a deal with Turkey intended to stem the flow of refugees making their way to Europe. In return for taking back refugees who make it to Greece, Turkey has been promised $6.8 bn and a host of political concessions.

Widely criticised by the international community, the EU-Turkey deal has been largely successful on its own terms. Faced with the prospect of being detained in one of Europe’s new asylum processing “hotspots” and returned to Turkey or becoming trapped in Greece following the closure of the border with Macedonia, many of those waiting in İzmir have changed their plans.

Slow business

During the autumn of 2015, when we were conducting research into the experiences, hopes and aspirations of Syrians living in Izmir, Basmane’s Corakkap Mosque was the meeting point for hundreds of people waiting for smugglers, dealers or daily support from the local community and NGOs. But when we visited recently, we found the area deserted.

When we asked a taxi driver sitting in front of the mosque where everyone had gone, he answered: “The border has been closed, so there is no reason for the refugees to wait here anymore. They stay in cheap hotels in the neighbourhood or they have settled by renting apartments.”

Little remains of the businesses that sprang up to meet refugees' demands and which dominated the neighbourhood only a few months ago. We saw just one shop with a life-vest in the window, and asked the owner why he still had these items for sale. He quickly told us that the life-vests were not for sale to refugees but rather were intended for those planning a trip on a Turkish tourist cruise ship.

In the backstreets, we saw another two life-vests hung outside a shop. This time, the seller told us downheartedly that these had been on sale for two weeks but no-one was interested in buying them. Sales, it seemed, were most definitely down.

But the sale of life jackets and rubber dinghies is only part of the story of the informal economy that developed in Basmane in response to the arrival of large numbers of refugees.

Cafes, shops and grocery stores quickly sprang up to meet growing demand, but today many of these places sit empty. Syrians who were making a living in Basmane have sold up and moved to other parts of the city where the population is more established and people are living and working in many textile and other factories that provide a wage, however meagre.

Finding a home

But everything is not quite what it seems.

We took a turn and walked along another street and entered another world: a Syrian ethnic neighbourhood with bustling shops, grocery stores, restaurants and barbers. All had bilingual signboards in Turkish and Arabic. Two of the restaurants had Syrian waiters and served mostly Syrian food.

We got chatting to a small group of Syrian men outside their small grocery store selling a mixture of Syrian, Turkish and Western food. Over a cup of dark Syrian coffee the owner told us that he had been living in Turkey for five years, during which time he had saved up enough money to buy the store.

We asked why he didn’t head across the Aegean with the others. “Europe means to learning a new language and integration into a new culture to start a business or to work,” he replies. “It means spending at least two years trying to integrate. We can work and survive here easily because there are many Syrians in this neighbourhood. We are obliged to look after our families and we need to work. This is easier for us in Turkey and we feel good here.”

The owner told us that many of the goods were imported from Gaziantep and Kilis near to the Turkish border with Syria. The Syrian bread sold in the store was produced by a neighbourhood bakery established by another Syrian refugee.

A few minutes later the headman (mukhtar) of the street invited us to his office just a few doors away. He showed us the registration papers of around 80 settled Syrians who were living in his street, together with copies of their temporary protection identity cards. For these people, Basmane is no longer a pit-stop: it had become a home. The headman told us that most of the settled Syrians worked in the neighbourhood, mostly in factories producing low-quality textile goods.

We asked about the relationship between the local community and those who were newly arrived. Did they get on? “Sure” he said. “We have to. They are settled here and we have no other options other than communicating. In the beginning, there was tension between the young groups. But we are very close with each other now. Even my tenants are Syrians and we love them.” This is view is supported by a recent survey of attitudes towards Syrians living in the city.

It’s clear that the story of Basmane is not yet finished.

The streets may no longer be crowded with refugees looking to make the Aegean crossing to Greece, but the impact of the latest wave of migration neighbourhood is clear for all to see. As news that the EU-Turkey deal may be on the verge of collapse reaches the streets of Basmane, it seems almost certain that the neighbourhood will start to re-orientate itself to whatever comes next – just as it always has done.

- Heaven Crawley is a Research Professor at Coventry University, UK. You can follow her on Twitter @heavencrawley.

Gokay Ozerim is an Assistant Professor and the Director of the European Union Research Center at Yasar University in Turkey.

The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Eye. This article was first published at TheConversation.com/uk

Photo: A view of the Gulf of Izmir on the Aegean Sea in the Turkish city of Izmir, on 24 November, 2013 (AFP).

Middle East Eye propose une couverture et une analyse indépendantes et incomparables du Moyen-Orient, de l’Afrique du Nord et d’autres régions du monde. Pour en savoir plus sur la reprise de ce contenu et les frais qui s’appliquent, veuillez remplir ce formulaire [en anglais]. Pour en savoir plus sur MEE, cliquez ici [en anglais].