Nearly a quarter of the 2 million people who have fled the crisis in
Syria
– some 460,000 – have made their way into
Turkey
, the UN high commission for
refugees
announcedon Tuesday.
While many find themselves at the Yayladagi refugee camp near the border in Hatay, the wider knock-on effect in the province, famous for being Turkey's most tolerant, has been palpable.
Many of the Alawite and Sunni families living there are directly related to Syrian families, pulling the conflict closer to home. More than a third of the population is of Arab Alawite descent and many Alawites rally behind
Bashar al-Assad
, while Sunni villages often support the predominantly Sunni opposition.
Sited on one of the main squares in Antakya, the provincial capital of Hatay, "the Statue of Tolerance" may not have been the most subtle work of art – two massive hands raised towards the sky, one holding a globe, the other a cross, a crescent and a Star of David – but it was meant to celebrate religious diversity and harmony among Christians, Muslims and Jews. Now it has turned into a symbol of the rising sectarian tension.
Six weeks after the sculpture was unveiled, vandals repeatedly defaced the Star of David. The religious symbols were then promptly – and somewhat ironically – exchanged for an olive branch by the municipality. It may though, be just papering over the cracks.
"Ankara increasingly displays a Sunni stance, in line with other Sunni axis powers such as Saudi Arabia and Qatar," said Tamer Yazar, a local journalist. "People in Hatay perceive this as taking sides in this sectarian conflict. Their open support of opposition fighters only made matters worse."