Thousands of Syrian refugees in <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/tags/turkey/" target="_blank">Turkey</a> are returning to rebel-held areas of their country after the <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/mena/2023/02/17/un-appeals-for-1-billion-to-help-turkey-earthquake-survivors/" target="_blank">February 6 earthquake</a> that caused widespread devastation on both sides of the border. Turkish authorities said refugees who entered north-west <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/tags/syria/" target="_blank">Syria</a> would have the right to return for up to six months, prompting many Syrians to cross the border to check on relatives. Officials gave no figures for the number of people entering at the Bab Hamam crossing into Idlib, but said 4,600 Syrians had passed through the Bab al Hawa crossing since Turkey announced the offer on Wednesday. "I haven't seen my family for four years, as I live alone in Turkey," Youssef Qramo said after crossing into Syria's north-west Idlib region. "The situation in Turkey is miserable in the areas where the earthquake hit," he told Reuters Mr Qramo, who had been living in the city of Gaziantep, said people were staying in tents in the cold and rain. As well as the harsh winter weather, Syrians had faced hostility, he said. Even before the earthquake, the 3.6 million Syrian refugees in Turkey had encountered growing resentment from Turks struggling with a rising cost of living and sometimes blaming the influx from Syria for their economic woes. In Gaziantep, Mr Qramo said police had moved Syrians out of a mosque where they were sheltering to make way for Turkish families. Several Turks in other quake-hit towns and cities have accused Syrians of robbing damaged shops and homes. "The situation is very tough for Syrians," he said. Mansour Hamoud, who was living in the Turkish port city of Iskenderun, said he had been sleeping in a park after his home was destroyed. "I decided to come back and live in my country. Dead or alive, I prefer to be with my family," he said. Around four million people live in north-west Syria under the control of armed rebels opposed to President <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/tags/bashar-al-assad/" target="_blank">Bashar Al Assad</a>'s government. The United Nations say most of them were dependent on aid even before the latest disaster. The 7.8 magnitude earthquake levelled thousands of building in Turkey and northern Syria, leaving millions homeless in freezing winter temperatures. The death toll had passed 38,000 in Turkey and 5,800 in Syria by Friday, 11 days after the earthquake. The disaster sparked a worldwide humanitarian response, although aid has been slower to reach Syria. Anas Haj Qadro, who was in the badly affected Turkish city of Antakya when the earthquake struck, said he had decided to live with his family in Idlib until some normality returned. <i>With reporting from Reuters</i>