Main content

Turkey: The Lost Generation

Around half a million Syrian refugee children are not attending school, leaving them open to exploitation and other forms of abuse. Tim Whewell reports from Turkey.

There as many as half a million Syrian refugee children who are not attending school, leaving them open to exploitation in sweatshops and other forms of abuse. Aid workers call them the "lost generation" and warn that unless they return to the classroom, Syria will lack educated people to help rebuild the country when the war eventually ends.

Tim Whewell meets children as young as nine employed up to 14 hours a day in textile sweatshops - and also a Syrian teacher who has helped rescue some of them from sweatshops by opening a special school for refugee children in Istanbul. Increasing educational opportunities for Syrians in Turkey may persuade some of them to give up their ambition of migrating to Europe but huge investment will be needed.

(Photo: Shaza Barakat and pupils)

Available now

27 minutes

Last on

Sun 3 Jul 2016 09:06GMT

Broadcasts

  • Thu 30 Jun 2016 01:06GMT
  • Thu 30 Jun 2016 02:06GMT
  • Thu 30 Jun 2016 03:06GMT
  • Thu 30 Jun 2016 04:06GMT
  • Thu 30 Jun 2016 06:06GMT
  • Thu 30 Jun 2016 14:06GMT
  • Thu 30 Jun 2016 21:06GMT
  • Sat 2 Jul 2016 02:32GMT
  • Sat 2 Jul 2016 16:32GMT
  • Sat 2 Jul 2016 19:32GMT
  • Sun 3 Jul 2016 09:06GMT

The Documentary Podcast

The Documentary Podcast

Hear more documentaries from the Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ World Service

Podcast