TEHRAN, June 22 - Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan and his main rival in Sunday's presidential election have both pledged to send millions of Syrian refugees home, responding to growing unease among voters about the number of migrants in Turkey.
TEHRAN, Young Journalists Club (YJC) - More than 3.5 million Syrian refugees who fled conflict in their country are living in Turkey and their presence has become an election issue, with some Turks viewing them as an economic burden and a threat to jobs, Reuters reported.
"Right after the election we aim to make all Syrian lands safe, starting from areas near our border, and to facilitate the return home of all our guests," Erdogan said in a speech in the southeastern city of Gaziantep.
"But to do this we need to get through June 24 (election day) safely. Syria's stability is dependent on Turkey being strong. Otherwise they will break Syria to pieces," he said.
Erdogan has said 200,000 Syrians have already returned to northern Syrian regions now controlled by Turkey and allied Syrian rebel forces after they launched military incursions to drive back Kurdish and Daesh terrorists.
Turks will vote in both presidential and parliamentary elections on Sunday. Opinion polls indicate they may be closer than expected when Erdogan called the votes in April, suggesting he may be pushed to a second-round run-off for the presidency, and his AKP could lose its majority in the 600-seat parliament, Reuters reported.
Muharrem Ince, the main opposition CHP's presidential candidate and Erdogan's biggest rival, has repeatedly vowed during his campaign to send Syrians back home.
He repeated the pledge in a rally late on Thursday, saying he would restore ties with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's government and appoint an ambassador to Damascus within 10 days if elected president.
"With peace policies we will send four million Syrians to Syria with the sound of drums and pipes," he told hundreds of thousands of people in the CHP's western stronghold of Izmir.
It was not clear how Ince's plan to re-establish ties with Damascus would persuade millions of Syrian refugees to return to areas under the control of the Syrian government.