Syrian refugees could become Turkish citizens: Erdogan
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ANKARA (APP/AFP) - Syrian refugees living in Turkey could eventually be granted Turkish citizenship, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has signalled.
"I want to announce some good news," media quoted Erdogan as saying late Saturday at a dinner to break the Ramzan fast in Kilis province, on the Syrian border.
"We are going to help our Syrian friends in offering them the chance, if they want it, to acquire Turkish nationality."
The interior ministry will shortly announce how the naturalisation procedure would work, Erdogan said, without giving further details.
"We regard you as our brothers and sisters -- you are not far from your homeland, but only from your homes and your land," Erdogan told a group of Syrian refugees in Kilis.
"Turkey is also your homeland."
Turkey is hosting over 2.7 million refugees from the conflict in Syria -- but Ankara has refused to grant them refugee status, referring to them as "guests".
Only a select group of Syrians have been granted work permits and residency.
Life is a struggle for most Syrians in Turkey, who live mostly off odd jobs that are often insufficient to feed and house a family.