Kos, Greece. As
dawn breaks on the Greek holiday island of Kos, new visitors arrive in
their hundreds; but they aren't stepping down onto the tarmac from a
freshly-landed plane, instead they're tumbling out of tiny inflatable
dinghies, directly onto the beach.
These
are not tourists, but refugees. And instead
of looking forward to
enjoying a fortnight in the sun, they're preparing to camp out in parks
and on the sand, as they wait for the papers that will allow them to
continue their journeys away from war, or out of poverty.
More
than 7,000 migrants arrived on Kos in July, according to Doctors
Without Borders, and tens of thousands more landed elsewhere in Greece
in the same month, stretching the capacity of its cash-strapped
government to cope, the U.N. refugee agency said.
In
total, almost 160,000 refugees and migrants arrived in Greece by sea
between January and mid-August this year, according to the UNHCR.
Ibrahim
Najjar said he had little choice but to flee his homeland: "There
is nothing left for us in Syria. Only destruction."
He
wants to travel on to Germany, where he hopes to find work as a waiter:
"My younger brother and I made it to Turkey, then we only had money to
bring me to Europe, so I had to leave him behind."
Manar,
27, and also from Syria made the hazardous journey to Greece while six
months pregnant; she is hoping to be reunited with her husband in time
for the birth of her baby.
"My husband
made it to Sweden a few months ago. We finally got the money for me to
be able to escape Syria too. The journey will be hard but we will be a
family there, happy and free. There is no freedom in Syria, only bombs".
There
have been dramatic changes in Kos since we were here just two months
ago: In June, the migrants were arriving at a rate of about 100 people a
night, but most of those we met were out of sight, living in poor
conditions in an abandoned hotel, the "Captain Elias."
Fast-forward
a couple of months, and it's a different picture. Migrants' tents have
taken over most of the beachfront near Kos City. They are camped in
squares and parks, or sleeping at the roadside.
Babies
crawl between the dirty blankets while older children kick a deflated
ball around and overdressed elderly men, still wearing jackets despite
the 40C heat, look back across the sea to Turkey, wondering if they will
ever see their homes again.
Some
escape the heat by swimming in the sea, sharing the beach with tourists,
most of who are bemused by the situation they find themselves in. Other
holidaymakers stay in their resorts to avoid the harsh reality of
island life.
Back
in June, the locals were sympathetic, and many are still helping the
new arrivals with food, water and toys for the children, but patience is
wearing thin.
Kostas owns a
restaurant in what used to be a prime position on the beachfront, next
to the beautiful police station. Now, with thousands of migrants waiting
for their papers on the same square, his business has gone downhill.
"I
feel sorry for them, how can I not?" he says. "But now no-one comes to
my restaurant, why would any tourists come here? The square is crowded,
dirty and it smells of urine. It is August, it is high season and I
already had to sack a cook and two waiters."
And
Kostas is not alone -- other locals are feeling the burden. Stella is a
street cleaner in Kos City. She says her children can't go out to play
anymore.
"It is full of people we
don't know, they make it all dirty, they have no toilets so you can
imagine ..." she says. "I work all day picking up their rubbish and it
is still dirty.
The
situations the migrants fled were desperate, but many have been
surprised, having survived the sea journey -- what they thought would be
the toughest part of their journey -- by how difficult life on Kos is.
Many of them are sleeping rough in areas ill-equipped to deal with the huge numbers of new arrivals.
A
spokeswoman for Doctors without Borders told CNN the migrants have no
food or water, no shelter, and no proper toilets. "They don't want to
stay here, they are completely shocked by these conditions," she says.
"They
have been fleeing their country because of war, because of the bombs,
and now they cannot even have a proper toilet. They are saying that
maybe the bombs have been better than staying in these conditions."
Ali,
27, says he left his home in the Iraqi capital, Baghdad, fearing for
his life: "I was a police officer in Iraq but I had to leave; if I
stayed in Iraq I would have been killed. There is no freedom in Iraq."
Like
Manar's husband, he hopes to one day be able to bring the rest of his
family to safety in Europe, but in the meantime, he is ashamed at the
depths he has had to sink to while staying on Kos.
"None
of us would have ever imagined we would live like this in Europe," he
says. "This is the first time in my life I sleep in the street, I feel
bad that people pass by and see me sleeping in the street".
Hassan,
too, has found the situation in Greece tough to deal with. The
22-year-old left his native Pakistan to find work overseas.
"It is difficult in Kos. I arrived 10 days ago and I am sleeping on the floor, with no electricity, food or water."
Like
most of the migrants and refugees arriving on the island, Hassan does
not intend to stay on Kos -- it is just the latest step on his journey
to what he hopes will be a better life.
"I
want to go to Italy and find a job; there are no jobs in my country,"
he explains. "When I make enough money in Italy I'll go back to my
family."
Everyone on Kos says they feel
pity for the migrants, insisting it is system, and not the people who
are the problem: they just want to collect the papers allowing them to
move on, but the process is slow, since the island does not have the
resources to deal with an influx on this scale.
"There
are 7,000 migrants on the island, we are only [about] 35,000 people
here in Kos," says car rental agent Lia Passanikolaki. "We don't have
enough police on the island to control the situation and process all
these people.
"It is not a nice situation for them, it is not a nice situation for us, it is not a situation for anyone".
Last
week, Kos's mayor, Yiorgos Kiritsis, called on the European Union to
provide emergency financial aid to Greece to help it handle the influx.
The
Greek government has tried to alleviate the crisis by sending a cruise
ship to Kos, on which all new arrivals will be temporarily housed until
they can be registered and move on.
"The
ship will cover basic accommodation needs; identification will take
place (on board), and the difficult situation on the island will be to a
large extent alleviated," explained Alekos Flambouraris, Greek minister
for the coordination of government work.
Greek
authorities say the ship can shelter 2,500 people; but after just a day
in the harbour, it is already home to more than 1,000 migrants.
And
with up to hundreds of new arrivals landing on the island's shores
every night, it is unclear how much this solution will do to ease Kos's
ongoing crisis.
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