Home Alaturka UPDATE – Nearly 450 irregular migrants held across Turkey

UPDATE – Nearly 450 irregular migrants held across Turkey

UPDATES WITH NUMBER OF MIGRANTS HELD; REVISES HEADLINE, LEDE; EDITS THROUGHOUT</p> <p>By Durmus Genc

ANKARA (AA) – A total of 448 irregular migrants were held across Turkey on Monday, officials said.

Gendarmerie forces held 119 migrants in the eastern Van province, according to a statement from provincial gendarmerie command.

The statement said 50 of the migrants were Afghan nationals.

At least 38 Syrian migrants, who entered Turkey from Syria using illegal means, were also held in the Altinozu district of southern Hatay province.

In the western Mugla province, the coast guard held 10 Palestinian and Yemeni migrants from a rubber boat.

The migrants were trying to reach Europe illegally.

Separately, in the central Sivas province, police stopped a taxi and held five Afghan migrants.

The coast guard stopped a boat carrying 32 Afghan migrants off the Aegean coast of northwestern Edirne province before it crossed to Greece.

Also in the the Kesan district of Edirne, bordering Greece and Bulgaria, police held 18 irregular migrants from a minibus.

Two suspects were arrested and appeared before a court, which remanded them in custody over human smuggling.

In another operation, 188 irregular migrants were held by gendarmerie forces in Edirne during regular patrols.

In the northwestern Canakkale province, 32 Afghan migrants, who were preparing to cross to Greece using illegal routes, were held by police.

Gendarmerie forces stopped two cars over suspicion in another northwestern Tekirdag province and detained six migrants who were Pakistani and Bangladeshi nationals.

Four suspects were also arrested and they were remanded in custody by a court.

Turkey has been the main route for refugees trying to cross to Europe, especially since the beginning of the civil war in Syria.

Some 268,000 irregular migrants were held in Turkey in 2018, according to the Interior Ministry.

The migrants were mostly Afghan, Pakistani, Syrian and Iraqi nationals.

*Writing by Fatih Hafız Mehmet and Busra Nur Bilgic

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