I left Aleppo on a microbus with my wife to the south of Turkey. Usually, this journey takes about one hour by bus (about 80 KMP) to the border, but it took us around twelve hours. The driver had to take the safest route,
because of the threat of kidnappings and bombings that we faced.
We passed more than thirty check points and arrived fifteen minutes after the border closed, so we had to stay in a small building prepared especially for such cases. We were with about 300 people, many of them children. It was freezing and the conditions were very poor in this crowded small place, and I developed severe influenza.
The next morning, we crossed the border and were directly transported to a Turkish city. My wife and I were two of the lucky ones.

The situation of Syrians living with HIV/AIDS, inside and outside the country, is desperate. There is a severe lack of health supplies, such as drugs, vaccines, laboratory and diagnostic materials, and surgical instruments in the region. This has an obvious impact on access to treatment for HIV and other infectious diseases.