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Wednesday, 12 August 2015
Migrants locked in stadium overnight on Greek island of Kos
Over a thousand mostly Syrian and Afghan refugees held in stadium as police use sound bomb to maintain order
Over a thousand refugees in Kos were locked overnight in a stadium,
after riot police struggled to contain crowds of recent migrant arrivals
who were rounded up in recent days from makeshift camps around the
Greek island.
Several of the refugees, who are mostly Syrian and Afghan, fainted
due to heatstroke, and one had an epileptic seizure, said the aid group
MSF, which was providing medical care at the stadium. At one point the
police used a sound bomb to maintain order, and the MSF team withdrew
for safety reasons.
Julia Kourafa, a spokeswoman for MSF at the stadium, said: “It was
becoming a bit uncontrollable, the situation, and there was a complete
lack of coordination. It was just the police there, no UNHCR [the UN’s
refugee agency], and no security for [our] team.”
Kourafa added: “This is the first time we’ve seen this in Greece
– people locked inside a stadium and controlled by riot police. We’re
talking about mothers with children and elderly people. They’ve been
locked in there after many hours in the sun.”
The migrants were locked inside ostensibly to be registered. But,
according to Kourafa, just three police officers were there to carry out
the registration, slowing the process down, and exacerbating tensions.
Tensions were also rising fast on several other eastern Greek
islands, where over 120,000 refugees have arrived since the start of the
year – up from around 30,000 during the whole of 2014.
Having made the short boat crossing from Turkey to the EU, the
refugees are frustrated to find themselves essentially trapped on the
Greek islands. The Greek authorities are attempting to register them all
before they are taken to Athens and tacitly allowed to move onwards
through Europe.
But due to the unprecedented scale of the crisis, Greek police have
been unable to process them fast enough, leading to bottlenecks on
islands such as Kos.
At times, the authorities have been unable to supply enough food, and
do not have enough space to house so many migrants, with over 1,000 new
arrivals landing from Turkey every morning.
Police on Tuesday tried to disperse hundreds of migrants by spraying
them with fire extinguishers during registration in the stadium.
Photograph: Yorgos Karahalis/AP
Despite the situation on the islands, many of the 1.6 million Syrian
refugees currently in limbo in Turkey are still planning to make the
journey to Greece. Mousa, a former English literature student planning
to reach Kos by the end of the month, said he was undeterred, despite
watching a video of the scene at the stadium. He said this was because
he intended to buy a fake EU passport on arrival in Kos, rather than
register as a refugee with the Greek government.
Mousa said: “I’d still go because, the way I’ve planned it, I’m
getting to Kos and then going straight to the airport and off to
[another EU destination]. I’m not going to deal with authorities in
Greece.”
Much of the humanitarian effort to help the refugees, who are mostly fleeing wars in Syria and Afghanistan, has been shouldered by local volunteers
and NGOs. The lack of resources and the slow pace of registration has
led to protests and sporadic clashes with police. Before the migrants
were locked overnight in the stadium, Kos police used fire extinguishers
to force back a group of protesting migrants. Earlier in the summer,
the Greek army was forced to keep order and provide extra supplies at a
migrant camp on the island of Lesbos, where the civilian authorities had
run out of food to feed the residents.
Migrants clash with police on Monday: ‘No one is helping us’
The Ekatimerini newspaper
reported that a dozen extra immigration officers, including Arab
speakers, have been sent to Kos this week to help speed up the
identification and registration of 7,000 mostly Syrian migrants now
thought to be on the island.
Two units of riot police have also been flown to the island, national
police chief Dimitris Tsaknakis told the paper, while a further 250
regular officers were on their way to Kos and the other eastern Aegean
islands of Lesbos and Samos.
The Greek islands are now the main point of entry for migrants
seeking to reach Europe by boat. The number of migrants arriving there
has outstripped the equivalent rate in Italy, which was traditionally
the principle gateway for maritime migrants. The migrant arrival rate is
still at record levels in Italy, but it has still welcomed around
20,000 fewer asylum seekers than Greece in 2015.
There are also fears of bottlenecks at the other end of Greece, at its northern border with Macedonia. Macedonian soldiers briefly closed the border in June,
blocking the exit route for thousands of refugees hoping to reach
northern Europe, and raising the spectre of a more permanent border
closure in the future.
At the time of writing, Kos’s mayor, Giorgos Kyritsis, had not returned requests for comment by telephone.
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