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Theme Changer

 Topic: Greek island refugee crisis

 (Read 108478 times)
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  • Greek island refugee crisis
     Reply #450 - September 07, 2015, 06:13 AM

    Daily Mirror report from Lesvos

    Police branded 'savages' after beating desperate refugees: http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/world-news/police-branded-savages-after-beating-6394427
  • Greek island refugee crisis
     Reply #451 - September 07, 2015, 06:20 AM

    From @theIRC: Fire + riots in Kara Tepe today + protests in Mytilini. Lives + safety of refugees stranded on the island at risk

    Failure to recognize severity of situation on #Lesvos has allowed it to escalate into a humanitarian disaster

    17000–25000+ people stuck on #Lesvos.1000s more arriving every day. Transit centre needed in north ASAP

    Refugees stuck on #Lesvos for weeks. Makeshift camps everywhere. Hygiene levels declining. Tensions rising rapidly

    Refugee backlog so enormous even best systems won't catch up. Only option = move people off #Lesvos immediately

    Refugees in Mytilene held a rally, now shouting "No Mytilene" at sit-in, ringed by riot police  https://twitter.com/kinimatini/status/640785505035132928

    Mytilene residents who want to drive across are swearing at refugees, kid says "treat us like humans, please"  https://twitter.com/kinimatini/status/640794947998904320

    Hands up, the refugees are forming a chain to stop irate drivers  https://twitter.com/kinimatini/status/640796273566683136

    Refugees are pitching up tents in the middle of the road, demand to leave Lesvos immediately  https://twitter.com/kinimatini/status/640799741568241664

    Fascist residents are threatening refugees with beatings from the Golden Dawn  https://twitter.com/kinimatini/status/640804855125278720

    Refugee protest in Mytilene held under the Golden Dawn offices  https://twitter.com/kinimatini/status/640805626722054144

    In Mytilene, "refugees started hugging us, said if it wasn't for our cameras, cops would have beaten them"  https://twitter.com/kinimatini/status/640829180385566721

  • Greek island refugee crisis
     Reply #452 - September 07, 2015, 06:58 AM

    Just returned from camp Karatepe close to #Mytilene. A total desaster. This cannot be Europe. This cannot be 21st century.

    Greece has 3 options: Start to build camps for HUMANS, or quickly send people to the next destination or build big cemeteries.

    Many #refugeesGr I spoke to have been here for more than 10 days and have no money left. No food distribution, no medical treatment.

    It's so heartbreaking to see how hopeful the people are when they arrive in Greece and their desperation after 2 days.
    ....
    I was informed that it is illegal to give refugees a ride. Car rental company took my car back.

  • Greek island refugee crisis
     Reply #453 - September 07, 2015, 07:14 AM

    #Lesvos: #SyrianRefugees started a demonstration from #KaraTepe to #Mytilini

    While around 1.000 RefugeesGr protest in #Mitilini against the non existing registration since 2 days, being hungry

    demands of demonstration: a quick solution as they are caught up along with thousands of #RefugeesGR for up to 2 weeks

    Some #fascists tried provoking the demonstration unsuccessfully.

    Currently the protestors agreed to open the streets - Giving the government a deadline to find solutions.

    Meanwhile #riotpolice took over in port, frightening away #RefugeesGr who had queued since early in the morning for registration

    registration procedures have frozen in #Mytilene. #UNHCR calls for evacuation of thousands of #RefugeesGR  from the island.

    Unregistered refugees are blocked without documents since days on #Mytilene

    Desperation & anger among #RefugeesGr  grown as they suffer inhuman living conditions & a total lack of reception infrastructures

  • Greek island refugee crisis
     Reply #454 - September 07, 2015, 12:33 PM

    Refugees on Samos: https://samoschronicles.wordpress.com/2015/09/04/walking-in-sun-refugees-on-samos-island/
  • Greek island refugee crisis
     Reply #455 - September 07, 2015, 12:57 PM

    The starving children in Moria: https://cptmediterranean.wordpress.com/2015/09/07/the-starving-children-in-moria-and-konstantinos-shining-smile/
  • Greek island refugee crisis
     Reply #456 - September 07, 2015, 01:04 PM

    Far right locals of #Lesbos call at 18:30 today, demonstration against refugees

    Don't count on police to protect the #RefugeesGr in #Lesvos Probably will help the fascists. International media help needed today.Plz RT
    ....
    Fascists and police forces attack refugees and supporters in #Lesvos as we said earlier and expected...

    riot police joined by golden dawn neonazis attack refugees, and anarchists who were there in solidarity  https://twitter.com/kinimatini/status/640919522917097472

    Anarchists welcomes refugees in Mitilini, Lesbos earlier today https://vimeo.com/138537669

    There are not enough people to register the #refugees. So the government is sending more riot police to the island.

    #Greek authorities send troops, police to #Lesvos after #migrant clashes - #refugeesGR  http://www.ekathimerini.com/201248
    ....
    3 police vans are boarding the "Ariadne" ship which is sailing from #Piraeus to #Lesbos

    ^These are the MAT riot police, more usually seen waiting around for trouble in central Athens.
  • Greek island refugee crisis
     Reply #457 - September 07, 2015, 01:44 PM

    Refugee crisis: Lesvos is a waiting hell: http://newint.org/features/web-exclusive/2015/09/07/refugee-crisis-greece-lesvos/
    Quote from: Natasha Tsangarides
    Hamza is a 9-year-old boy from Hama, a city in the west of Syria. He was hit by an aerial bomb a few weeks ago, wounding his leg and hand, with shrapnel causing a head injury. In his current state, he can’t talk, and he can’t walk.

    Just like over 4 million other Syrians, Hamza and his family fled the war that has devastated their country. They travelled through Lebanon and Turkey and, from there, on an overcrowded, inflatable rubber dinghy, they sailed across the Aegean Sea to reach Europe.

    When Hamza arrived on the Greek island of Lesvos, he and his family were expected to walk around 15 kilometres along mountain roads to reach the bus stop. From there, a bus would take them to Mytilene, the island’s biggest city, where refugees have to register – except that there are not enough buses for all of them, so most people have to walk a further 60 kilometres.

    At Mytilene’s port, there were thousands of people waiting to be registered. With only one photographer available to register everyone, the wait is long – and many people are told to return the next day.

    Waiting at the designated refugee camp, a further 3 kilometres away from Mytilene, Hamza needs medical treatment but by now night has fallen, and there are no doctors at the camp. There are also no tents, no blankets and no food available.

    The peak of summer means calm Mediterranean waters, and that means over 2,000 refugees arriving daily in Lesvos. On busy days, up to 4,000 refugees land on the island. In the usually quiet coastal village of Skala Sikaminias, up north, the shoreline is now littered with slashed rubber dinghies and lifejackets.

    Every day, the boats come streaming in. And every day, the beaches bear no sign of any official state presence or NGO representatives; it’s only when refugees reach Mytilene, 75 kilometres away, that they are met by officials.

    The moment the refugees arrive is dramatic: there’s crying, laughing, singing, taking selfies and praying. Shortly afterwards, when they realize what lies ahead, their faces transform as sorrow, disappointment and fear creep in.

    Lesvos has become a kind of limbo: a burning hot and filthy cauldron where refugees wait endlessly to be registered so as to leave the island and continue their onward journey. With refugees now arriving in record numbers, there are not enough ferries to get them to Athens, so their time in purgatory extends and the island becomes increasingly chaotic. There are now an estimated 17,000 refugees on the island and the UNHCR has called for an emergency evacuation.

    Each morning at 5.30, British citizens Eric and Philippa Kempson head down to the coast and greet the refugees. The Kempsons and their small team of rotating volunteers provide water for the journey ahead, while women with babies and people with disabilities are driven by volunteers to the bus station, located in a car park in Molyvos town.

    Once at the bus station, it is again volunteers who hand out water and sandwiches to the newly arrived. Most people will continue by foot to the city, but some will wait in the car park with no toilet facilities for a bus that has no timetable.

    Recently, the municipality, under pressure from local associations, has closed down the volunteer-run transit centre and stopped allowing refugees to wait in the car park. In addition, the authorities have stopped transporting people by bus to the city because of overcrowding. This means that people either have to sleep rough where they first land, or everybody, young and old alike, walks to the city.

    The city of Mytilene is one of the most beautiful in Greece, adorned with neoclassical buildings and surrounded by hills. Now barely recognizable, the port and parks of the city are heaving with refugees, tents everywhere. Some are waiting to be registered, while others who cannot bear the squalor of the camps prefer to sleep rough outdoors.

    Eleni Kelmali is a junior grade Lieutenant of the Lesvos Hellenic Coastguard. In addition to conducting search-and-rescue missions, the Hellenic Coastguard is now assisting the police with registration and crowd management at the port. Hundreds of refugees wait under the sweltering sun every day as the authorities struggle to maintain calm and get the refugees to form orderly queues without the assistance of interpreters.

    Despite being sent reinforcements from the Central Port Authority, Kelmali explains: ‘The measures taken are not enough. Even if you doubled the number of people, it would still be difficult to manage the situation. We should have unlimited people. We wish for more help from the EU through our Ministry.’

    ‘This is not the Europe I expected,’ a Syrian man told me. The refugees who arrive aren’t guaranteed to find food, water and shelter. Overwhelmed by the number of arrivals, and suffering its own economic crisis, Greece is unable to cope.

    Even though the city feels like a cesspit waiting to explode, the two refugee camps, Kara Tepe and Moria, are worse.

    Anna Halford is the Lesvos Field Co-ordinator for Médecins Sans Frontières. She says: ‘Basic standards of living need to be met. For Lesvos, there has been an effort to organize reception and transit, but the organization isn’t sufficient. Numbers exceed the capacity and measures to manage it. The country cannot cope.’

    Kara Tepe camp was set up by the Mayor of Lesvos on a traffic education site and was intended to house 500 refugees; now, there are around 2,000 people there. The camp is meant to be only for Syrians, although the vetting process is weak and several other nationalities also reside there.

    The International Rescue Committee (IRC) is one of the only NGOs operating in Greece for the first time to assist in the refugee crisis. The NGO provides information, water and sanitation services in Kara Tepe camp and is planning to expand its operations further inland as well.

    Simon Clarke, the Emergency Deputy Field Director for IRC, said: ‘The situation is horrendous. There’s nowhere near enough shelter. There’s not enough food – there’s one meal a day provided. The toilets and showers are at breaking point.’ With no management of the camp, conditions are unhygienic and rubbish overflows – but this does not compare to the squalor of Moria.

    When you walk into Moria camp, it is hard to believe it’s in Europe. The detention facility, with a capacity for 700 people, is full, so the outside area is strewn with tents and makeshift shelters for almost 3,000 refugees. It feels desperate. Few people speak English, but those who do ask the same questions: ‘Why is there no water?’; ‘How can I wash here?’; ‘Please, where is the doctor?’; and ‘Do people know we are here?’.

    Greece operates a fast-track system for Syrians, so their registration papers tend to be processed within a couple of days. For the other nationalities who arrive and stay at Moria, the wait is much longer and can be anything from 20 to 40 days.

    While food is provided, it is never enough: no-one, not even the catering company, was ever prepared for these numbers. There is water from the tap available, although it reeks, so many buy water from the kiosk. The lucky ones have tents provided by international organizations, such as Médecins Sans Frontières; the majority sleep on flattened cardboard boxes or mats.

    With a lack of management and authority at Moria, an atmosphere of insecurity reigns. Fights break out regularly and some people carry knives as weapons.

    Amin is a 13-year-old Amin from Afhganistan. On 20 August, we had both witnessed a fight involving around 100 people, some of whom had knives, and one man was stabbed. No security staff or doctor ever came.

    ‘Where is [the]UNHCR? Where are the guards? There are fights here. Who will protect us? It is not safe at all here. You can’t sleep at night,’ he says.

    Antonios Gkagkarellis, a police lieutenant based at Moria camp, says that on a daily basis, there are 8 to 9 police officers at Moria, but they only guard the interior detention centre.

    ‘We don’t have enough resources. Inside, we have about 750 people and outside around 2,500. This isn’t safe. Our lives are not even safe here. The numbers are so big outside that we don’t have the ability to check the stuff [weapons] of the people outside. With this situation, we can’t cope.’ Eliza Goroya, Amnesty International’s Campaigner for Greece, echoes the same concerns over the situation.

    ‘Greece does not cope, cannot cope. Refugees flee war, rape, torture, and/or poverty only to be met by a support system on its knees. Too often for it to be acceptable, these vulnerable people rely on the kindness of local activists even for the most basic things like shelter and food. Greece is on the news constantly, but we need to talk more about the humanitarian crisis. We need to hold EU leaders accountable.’

    On the island of Lesvos, it is glaringly obvious that Europe has failed in its duty to protect refugees. There is anger towards EU leaders but also towards the UNHCR.

    Despite this being the biggest refugee crisis since the Second World War , the UNHCR has so far not provided a single tent. This year, the organization has distributed a total of 7,400 units of bottled water, the equivalent of what the volunteer Kempsons distribute in a couple of days.

    In purgatory, something has gone horribly wrong. The smugglers are proving more organized than European states; and kind-hearted, untrained volunteers are assisting more people than international humanitarian agencies.

    The EU has so far failed to take responsibility for the refugee crisis, and as the situation escalates and refugee numbers on the island swell, the EU and its member states urgently need to increase emergency support to those assisting refugees arriving in Greece.

    On 14 September 2015, a meeting will take place in Brussels between several EU interior and justice ministers. This is an opportunity to rectify the dysfunctional European asylum system and to create safe and humane routes for refugees, which can respect their rights and protect them.

  • Greek island refugee crisis
     Reply #458 - September 07, 2015, 02:00 PM

    The cause of the surge in refugees from Syria to the EU: https://storify.com/baldry/worth-reading-these-knowledgeable-tweets-from-turk
  • Greek island refugee crisis
     Reply #459 - September 07, 2015, 02:06 PM

    An unexpected journey: https://www.facebook.com/refugeesjourney
    Quote
    A photojournalist disguising as a refugee following their journey from Turkey to Germany by sea and land to tell the story what refugees really go through

    Day 6 (Sep. 6, 2015)
    We are still stuck in Mitilini.

    Complete mess.

    That is how you would describe the situation of the port of Mitilini and two major refuge camps set up on the outskirts of the city.

    The local government could't imagine that they would be the very frontline of this refugee crisis and with no resource to handle these numbers pouring in to its island(average about 1,000 refugees a day since early summer).

    Things get out of control very easily, sometimes ignited with just a few shoutings by angry crowds demanding a better system to deal with the refugees.

    After a fight that turned brutal between Afghans and Syrians/Iraqis on Thursday morning - with no authority present different refugee groups got in an argument with forming a proper line and it escalated into a bigger fight where stones were thrown at each other injuring many, the local municipality requested a police re-enforcement from Athens.

    As a result, things got a bit under control at least among different refugee groups but created another form of violence - mainly riot police beating refugees while attempting to keep things in order, and the registration office(one container box with just a couple of windows to handles tens of thousands) is prone to shut down entirely at any time for hours slowing the process down even further.

    People have to walk over 3km under the heat back and forth between the camp and the port without knowing whether they would be able to get things done. Quite helpless vibe.

    And just like others we are waiting.

    Hope things will change soon.

    Inshallah.

    Day 7 (Sep. 7, 2015)

    Back to Skala. A little village where refugees arriving on the shore first pass through.

    Last night, there was a wedding at a small church next to the sea. Unusual day according to the locals not seeing any refugee throughout the day.

    Around 11pm after a few hours of waiting I decided to head back to the hotel away from the village. Walking in the dark I saw a few people approaching toward me. A group of Syrians.

    The same excitement I shared a few days ago. Tired but happy.

    By the time they entered the village the wedding group was dancing and a few Syrians danced along in the dark with the music provided. It was quite touching.

    I was worried the villagers may try to ask them not to stay but it was late night and even the restaurant that normally doesn't allow refugees to sit let them take a rest and order food.

    This morning I am again next to the shore waiting for the next boats to come in.
    I just saw a chopper in the air.

    Now I can imagine what exactly is going on on the other side in Turkey as that's what we did.

    Huddled by the smugglers quickly into the bush while hiding the rafts, a more shoutings and occasional warning gun shots and a long long wait.

    I know how tedious that wait had been for all of us and I just feel feel everyone on the other side and wish they all can make it over here without being caught by the Turkish police who would send them back to the starting point.

    Though making across is just another beginning, at least you know you are one step closer.

    Inshallah.

  • Greek island refugee crisis
     Reply #460 - September 07, 2015, 02:30 PM

    Situation in Greek islands of Kos, Lesvos etc out of control. Athens has basically abandoned both refugees and local inhabitants.

    Greek central govt has been neglecting refugees on islands such as Kos since May. Now scale of the problem has grown.

    The criminal neglect of refugees is something Syriza govt needs to be held accountable for. Happened on their watch

  • Greek island refugee crisis
     Reply #461 - September 07, 2015, 03:18 PM

    Mytilene today: http://wp.me/p6gbSA-oV









  • Greek island refugee crisis
     Reply #462 - September 07, 2015, 03:34 PM

    Going on now...
    Best news so far from the #Lesvos front of #refugeecrisis - en masse registration!

    At last, Greek authorities start a massive operation of registering #refugees in #Lesvos island. Lots of smiles around

  • Greek island refugee crisis
     Reply #463 - September 07, 2015, 04:58 PM

    I explain in next tweets effect of surge in number of refugees has on local players in Syria: rebels + Nusra, ISIS, Kurds & regime

    First, based on my personal observations, it is clear to me that Syrians from ALL backgrounds & ALL areas are leaving #Syria

    In all #Syria, rulers fear exodus of their own population. Reasons are obvious: If everybody leaves who will defend the place?

    Let me explain now per region, how the mood is among rulers regarding exodus of Syrians to outside and esp #Germany

    In rebel territory (mainly NSyria) groups put billboards on border crossings w/ Turkey, saying: "Where r u going, teacher don't emigrate."

    Also anti-emigration billboards in rebel areas with text: "Doctors, dont emigrate, my son is sick, he needs you."

    In ISIS territory, rulers also fearful of Syrian population leaving to EU. Check next tweet.

    I got this ISIS-document: "Warning doctors, pharmacists who left Caliphate. Return or we confiscate ur property" > pic.twitter.com/vLYZN1Dqm6

    Plus, Syrians leaving to EU is shock to ISIS /Islamists bcz emigration (Hijra) should be done 2 Muslim countries not to "land of Kufar"

    In Kurdish areas, YPG also very worried about departure of Kurds to EU. They fear "permanent demographic changes in #Syria."

    In Kurdish Afrin-area (nw-Syria), YPG introduced new rule: People cant just leave Afrin any longer, they need special permission.

    Also Kurds in Afrin can't sell houses anymore, this to avoid that others buy houses & permanently change demographics of area

    In #Syria regime-areas same worry about ppl leaving to EU. If it continues at current rate, who will defend area against rebels & ISIS?

    Ads in regime-areas say: "Join armed forces, with our army we gain our country." & "Your country needs you." pic.twitter.com/uE8gqDYjMR

    Also minority Ismailis, Druze, Armenians r leaving Syria. Hardly anyone cares about them. Main Syria groups happy they r dumped in Germany

  • Greek island refugee crisis
     Reply #464 - September 07, 2015, 05:04 PM

    Minister in the Lords just confirmed refugee orphans and children brought in under Cameron's scheme will be deported at age 18.

  • Greek island refugee crisis
     Reply #465 - September 07, 2015, 05:45 PM

    Time Magazine on the Lesvos crisis: http://time.com/4023601/migrant-crisis-greece-lesvos/
  • Greek island refugee crisis
     Reply #466 - September 07, 2015, 07:49 PM

    New obstacle for refugees: the Greek coast guard: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/news/nation-world/world/article34176192.html
  • Greek island refugee crisis
     Reply #467 - September 08, 2015, 04:39 AM

    Denmark and Hungary sending clear messages.

    `But I don't want to go among mad people,' Alice remarked.
     `Oh, you can't help that,' said the Cat: `we're all mad here. I'm mad.  You're mad.'
     `How do you know I'm mad?' said Alice.
     `You must be,' said the Cat, `or you wouldn't have come here.'
  • Greek island refugee crisis
     Reply #468 - September 08, 2015, 05:21 AM

    Some twats actually photoshopped a pic of a drowning woman because she wasn't wearing a hijab. What the fuck?


    `But I don't want to go among mad people,' Alice remarked.
     `Oh, you can't help that,' said the Cat: `we're all mad here. I'm mad.  You're mad.'
     `How do you know I'm mad?' said Alice.
     `You must be,' said the Cat, `or you wouldn't have come here.'
  • Greek island refugee crisis
     Reply #469 - September 08, 2015, 05:28 AM

    Minister in the Lords just confirmed refugee orphans and children brought in under Cameron's scheme will be deported at age 18.


    Wait, wait... what?


    He's no friend to the friendless
    And he's the mother of grief
    There's only sorrow for tomorrow
    Surely life is too brief
  • Greek island refugee crisis
     Reply #470 - September 08, 2015, 11:30 AM

    The refugee crisis: journalism in action
    Who is the camerawoman tripping a man with a child in his arms at 00:16? Did she do it for better footage? #Roeszke  https://twitter.com/15MBcn_int/status/641225419707035648


    Edit: the same camerawoman kicking a child in this video: http://index.indavideo.hu/video/Kitoresek_Roszkenel

    Edit2:
    #N1 journalist Petra #László fired after kicking & tripping #refugees

    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=WrdYXatl3b8



    Edit3: Petra Laszlo shame wall: https://www.facebook.com/pages/László-Petra-Szégyenfal-Petra-Laszlo-Shame-Wall/779540718824880
  • Greek island refugee crisis
     Reply #471 - September 08, 2015, 11:36 AM

    Some good news from Lesvos
    Kara Tepe nearly empty today after mass evacuation and new registration process started yesterday.

    15,000 people reportedly registered in #Lesbos #Greece last night. Ready to buy tickets, board ferries & continue journey.

  • Greek island refugee crisis
     Reply #472 - September 08, 2015, 11:56 AM

    France24 report from Lesvos
    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=yDxYBHB3I3U
  • Greek island refugee crisis
     Reply #473 - September 08, 2015, 12:21 PM

    Lesvos on Saturday
    https://m.youtube.com/watch?feature=youtu.be&v=IkgNon8dMhw
  • Greek island refugee crisis
     Reply #474 - September 08, 2015, 12:55 PM

    Finally we've got our papers !we still stuck waiting to book our tickets which may take few days !!

    An Unexpected Journey Day 8

    After two nights on the shore side I came back and things got a bit calm down. Still a lot of refugees in town but much more peaceful and the local government seemed to find a more effective way to handle the situation.

    For those who have waited for days now got their document in order but getting a ferry ticket became more challenging now.

    After unusually quiet two days I was told again close to 1,000 refugees have already arrived from both northern and southern end.

  • Greek island refugee crisis
     Reply #475 - September 08, 2015, 01:07 PM

    Refugees on Samos: https://mobile.twitter.com/kreetalainen
  • Greek island refugee crisis
     Reply #476 - September 08, 2015, 01:22 PM

    Mytilene port today: https://mobile.twitter.com/savvaskarma/status/641280494844383233/video/1
  • Greek island refugee crisis
     Reply #477 - September 08, 2015, 01:33 PM

    Refugee crisis brings out best and worst in Europe: http://www.cbc.ca/news/world/refugee-crisis-nahlah-ayed-1.3218520
    Quote
    ....
    One Syrian mother from Aleppo, who is a lawyer by training, told CBC News her family was travelling from Turkey to Greece when their dinghy was picked up by what she described as a Greek military ship. Rowa'a Meirej said the personnel on board searched her and her family, destroyed their mobile phones, threw out their belongings and then left them in their dinghy drifting in the waters of the Mediterranean Sea.

    They were rescued by Turkish coastal authorities and returned to the Turkish coast. They tried to make the crossing again and this time succeeded. She said she made the perilous journey for the sake of her children "because the future is over in Syria."
    ....

  • Greek island refugee crisis
     Reply #478 - September 08, 2015, 01:46 PM

    Angry refugees attempt to storm ferry in Lesvos -VIDEO

    http://en.enikos.gr/society/34430,Angry-refugees-attempt-to-storm-ferry-in-Lesvos--VIDEO.html

    `But I don't want to go among mad people,' Alice remarked.
     `Oh, you can't help that,' said the Cat: `we're all mad here. I'm mad.  You're mad.'
     `How do you know I'm mad?' said Alice.
     `You must be,' said the Cat, `or you wouldn't have come here.'
  • Greek island refugee crisis
     Reply #479 - September 08, 2015, 03:52 PM

    ....
    Greek authorities on Lesbos issued travel permits to 15,000 refugees in a marathon 24-hour relief operation, easing pressure on the holiday island after days of mounting tension.

    While the mass registrations will alleviate the crisis on the island – which receives one in every two refugees entering Greece – it will unleash a fresh wave of refugees on what is by now a well-worn route to Athens, north through the Balkans and into Western Europe.

    The Greeks finally took action to ease the humanitarian crisis on the island, where up to 20,000 refugees, many of them Syrian, were sleeping rough in parks, streets and the port area of Lesbos’ main town, Mytilini.

    They were unable to leave the island because there were not enough Greek officials to issue them with onward travel permits, stoking frustration that sometimes exploded into clashes with riot police.

    An extra 65 police and coast guard officers were drafted in from Athens to register the refugees in a dusty, disused football stadium in Mytilini, in an all-night operation in which vast queues formed.

    Specially laid-on ferries then transported around 6,000 refugees and migrants from Mytilini to Athens in just 24 hours, with more boats due to take another 4,500 refugees to the port of Piraeus near Athens on Wednesday.

    Refugees who boarded the ferries cheered and applauded from the decks as the giant boats left the port.

    “We worked very hard all night, without any sleep, and this is the result – we emptied the stadium in less than 24 hours,” Major-General Zacharoula Tsirigoti, the police officer in charge of the operation, told The Telegraph. “Everything is under control now. I didn’t expect to be able to do it in 24 hours.”

    “With Hungary threatening to build a bigger fence along its border with Serbia and to close the frontier, we expect the flow will increase, as people try to get into Hungary before the gates shut,” she said.

    Aid agencies applauded the efforts of the Greek authorities.

    “It took far too long but this is what was needed,” said Tyler Jump of the International Rescue Committee, a humanitarian organisation working on the island. “There was a critical mass of people on the island and the pressure needed to be released. Processing them and getting them on the boats was the only solution.”

    Thousands of refugees are still arriving in dozens of dinghies from nearby Turkey every day.
    ....

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