By Agence France-PresseÂ
Crouched between olive trees in northwest Syria, Jumaa al-Mustayf cuts long metal tubes with an electric saw to make tent frames for families displaced by war.
Jumaa al-Mustayf welds metal pipes for another tent frame (AFP / Aaref WATAD / MANILA BULLETIN)
With winter approaching in Idlib province, the man nicknamed "metalsmith of the camps" says his welding skills are in especially high demand.
"So far the orders keep on coming," says the skinny 34-year-old, his skin sunburnt from days working out in the open.
Idlib has come under repeated bombardment by the Damascus regime and its Russian ally this year, causing hundreds of thousands of civilians to flee north towards the border with Turkey.
More than three million people live in the jihadist-held region, and around half of them are already displaced from other parts of the country by fighting.
Mustayf says he once ran a successful metalwork business in southeast Idlib, but two years ago the war forced him and his family to flee their home.
"I had to build my own tent to live in it. People saw it and they started placing orders. So I got to work," he says.
On a patch of red earth near the village of Hazano, Mustayf has set up a makeshift workshop to supply residents in the nearby camp with sturdy frames to shelter them from a wet winter.
Two men unload dozens of long metal poles from a small truck, stacking them on the ground.
Hanging nearby, a modest cardboard sign reads: "Metalsmith of the camps".
Jumaa al-Mustayf welds metal pipes for another tent frame (AFP / Aaref WATAD / MANILA BULLETIN)
With winter approaching in Idlib province, the man nicknamed "metalsmith of the camps" says his welding skills are in especially high demand.
"So far the orders keep on coming," says the skinny 34-year-old, his skin sunburnt from days working out in the open.
Idlib has come under repeated bombardment by the Damascus regime and its Russian ally this year, causing hundreds of thousands of civilians to flee north towards the border with Turkey.
More than three million people live in the jihadist-held region, and around half of them are already displaced from other parts of the country by fighting.
Mustayf says he once ran a successful metalwork business in southeast Idlib, but two years ago the war forced him and his family to flee their home.
"I had to build my own tent to live in it. People saw it and they started placing orders. So I got to work," he says.
On a patch of red earth near the village of Hazano, Mustayf has set up a makeshift workshop to supply residents in the nearby camp with sturdy frames to shelter them from a wet winter.
Two men unload dozens of long metal poles from a small truck, stacking them on the ground.
Hanging nearby, a modest cardboard sign reads: "Metalsmith of the camps".