Greece's Migrant Crisis: "A Powder Keg Ready to Explode"
A plan by the Greek government to build new migrant camps on five Aegean islands has sparked violent opposition from local residents, who fear that the facilities will encourage yet more mass migration from Africa, Asia and the Middle East. The government says that the new camps, expected to be operational by July 2020, are needed to alleviate overcrowding at other locations that have been the focus of international criticism. Local residents counter that the migrants should be transferred to mainland Greece. On February 25, more than 500 locals prevented construction workers from accessing the site of a proposed new migrant camp at Karava Mantamadou on Lesbos. Riot police used tear gas and stun grenades to disperse the crowds. Similar clashes occurred on Chios, a large Greek island located less than 20 kilometers from Turkey, from where tens of thousands of migrants depart each year in hopes of eventually reaching mainland Europe. The new site on Lesbos will be a so-called closed camp that tightly controls access and will replace the current open-access camp at Moria. The closed camps will allow migrants to go out during the day but will require them to be locked in at night. The objective is to control their movements and prevent them from escaping to the mainland. In addition to Lesbos, Greek authorities plan to build closed facilities on the islands of Chios, Kos, Leros and Samos. The islands are all close to Turkey. The camp at Moria — a sprawling facility built for no more than 3,000 migrants but which is now accommodating at least 20,000, approximately one-third of whom are under the age of 18 — has attracted widespread international criticismfor its squalid living conditions. A spokesperson for Doctors Without Borders (Médecins Sans Frontières, MSF), Sophie McCann, explained: "They are living in squalid, medieval-like conditions... with barely any access to basic services, including clean and hot water, electricity, sanitation and healthcare. On a daily basis our medical teams are treating the consequential deterioration of health and wellbeing."In 2016, Greek authorities, with backing from the EU, introduced a so-called containment policy aimed at deterring migrants from crossing to Greece from Turkey. The policy requires migrants to remain on the islands — with no hope of reaching the Greek mainland — until their asylum requests are processed. With a backlog of tens of thousands of applicants, the asylum system has come to a standstill. Approximately 40,000 migrants are effectively trapped on the islands. The containment policy has angered local residents, who complain that migrants are responsible for a spike in crime. "People have seen their properties destroyed, their sheep and goats have been slaughtered, their homes broken into," said Nikos Trakellis, a community leader in Moria. "A few years back, when there were 5,000 migrants on the island, things seemed bad enough. Now there's a sense that the situation has really got out of hand." In October 2019, the Greek government announced a plan to transfer 20,000 migrants from the islands to the mainland. A subsequent surge in new migrant arrivals from Turkey, however, has left the migrant camps on the islands as overcrowded as ever. Greek authorities say that they are doing their best to satisfy locals, migrants and human rights groups. "The government is making an effort to change something, to implement a plan," a government official told the Reuters news agency. "If we don't construct new facilities, living conditions won't improve." North Aegean Regional Governor Kostas Moutzouris, who opposes the government's plan to build permanent migrant camps on the islands, describedthe situation on Lesbos as a "powder keg ready to explode." He added: "It's crucial that a state of emergency is called." He also warned: "I fear for the safety of our people, the residents of Lesbos. For the situation to change, many refugees have to be transferred to the mainland and new arrivals from Turkey must be stopped. If not, we are doomed."Government spokesperson Stelios Petsas, who described the existing facilities as "public health bombs," said: "We are asking the local communities to understand that these closed facilities will benefit the country and their communities. There's a trust deficit right now that has been cultivated over previous years, and this needs to be restored. We will build these closed centers but also close the existing open ones. That is the government's promise.Greece's center-right government, led by Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, who took office after parliamentary elections in July 2019, has taken a more hardline approach toward migration than did the previous left-wing government led by Alexis Tsipras:
"Welcome in Greece are only those we choose. Those who are not welcome will be returned. We will permanently shut the door to illegal human traffickers, to those who want to enter even though they are not entitled to asylum."Since 2015, more than a million migrants from Africa, Asia and the Middle East have entered the European Union through Greece. A March 2016 agreement between the EU and Turkey reduced the flow, but the number of arrivals resurged in 2019, after Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and other members of his government threatened to flood Europe with Muslim migrants. Greek officials have said that Erdoğan personally controls the migration flows to Greece and turns them on and off to extract more money and other political concessions from the European Union. Greek Immigration Minister Giorgos Koumoutsakos noted that when Turkey "keeps repeating that we're going to open the floodgates, what migrants do is they move closer to the floodgates waiting for them to open." He added: "Europe cannot act under threats or blackmail. As Europeans should understand the situation that the Turks are faced with, Ankara should on its part realize that this is not the way to deal with Europe."In 2019, approximately 60,000 migrants — an average of 164 per day — reached Greece, according to UNHCR, the UN refugee agency. Nearly 80% arrived on Chios, Lesbos and Samos. The trend continues: More than 6,000 migrants — an average of 133 per day — reached Greece during the first six weeks of 2020, according to the UNHCR. The top countries of origin: Afghanistan (50%); Syria (21%); Congo (6%) and Iraq (3.5%). Recent fighting in Idlib, a war-torn province in northwestern Syria, has uprootednearly one million people — most of them women and children — who have sought sanctuary near the Turkish border. Turkey, which currently hosts nearly four million Syrian refugees, has said it cannot handle a new influx. It has repeatedly threatened to re-open the floodgates of mass migration to Europe. Soeren Kern is a Senior Fellow at the New York-based Gatestone Institute.
Soooo... when this fear of Coronavirus hits the camps, I wonder how seriously they'll be contained. REALLY. Will it expose the media for fear-mongering or will the media suddenly, conveniently, downplay the spread to assist the transfer of illegal migrants-turned-'refugees' to mainland Europe with the unspoken goal of cultural destruction and economic destabilization?
Greece's policy -- all country's policies -- should be to return these illegal migrants to their homelands and help them resettle there -- that's the only sane solution. The huge sums of money now used addressing the crisis could be redirected to build these folk quite a luxurious refuge in their own lands.
Reply->
Selma Soss • Feb 28, 2020 at 08:50
I am terribly sorry that Greece is suffering from such a huge influx of migrants. It isn't fair to families and a peaceful way of life. But I am also sorry for France and the migrants that have disrupted their lives; the amount of anti Semitism, causing Jewish people to move. I am extremely sorry for poor Sweden, the Swedish people are really overtaken. I admire the leaders and government officials who have taken a stand on this immigration. Enough is enough. We have to consider our families, certainly our children. Whatever culture these migrants come from... send them back there!
Reply->
Hamish MacDonald • Feb 28, 2020 at 07:28
Good article, and timely.
Erdogan's objective is to completely change all European culture so that it embraces Islam. This is the end point. How this is achieved is in many ways. Destabilizing Greece so that it becomes a mere puppet state and a jumping off point into the EU is the first step that is in the mind of Erdogan. He keeps out of trouble, but uses every piece of leverage he can to regain power once in the hands of the Ottoman empire. But it would not bother him one bit if every Greek Orthodox Christian perished in the slow process. Erdogan should not to be trusted.
Reply->
Raj • Feb 28, 2020 at 07:14
And this is happening in the birthplace of democracy!
Reply->
Dawne Swift • Feb 28, 2020 at 07:08
With 4m migrants it's probably true that Turkey can't cope with any more migrants, though clearly Erdogan is using the migrants as a bargaining tool with the EU. The problem really is the generous welfare benefits paid to migrants, refugees and asylum seekers by northern European countries in particular. If these were ceased completely the draw of guaranteed homes, money, health care and education would be ended.
Reply->
cammo99 • Feb 28, 2020 at 06:42
The camps should be built in the nations they came from, then they won't be refugees. This is a socialist and absurdly conceive that you redistribute wealth by redistributing people and this is a clear indication the rich do not participate or suffer the ills and for all we know they take money for facilitating "refugees" then they ruin and destroy the next lower classes. American, live and learn.
Reply->
Albert Reingewirtz • Feb 28, 2020 at 06:17
Why are the Arab Muslim refugees not trying to reach their ancestral land, Arabia or other Muslim lands? They aim for Europe only, why?
Reply->
Raj • Feb 28, 2020 at 06:14
Maybe Greece should transfer their citizens to the middle east at least then they will get a better idea of what their country will look like in the not too distant future, and believe me it ain't gonna look pretty.
Reply->
Laura • Feb 28, 2020 at 06:09
Why don't the Greek government have fast naval boats standing-off the Turkish coast to intercept and TURN BACK any boats attempting to break in to Europe?
Building yet more camps will simply mean that ever more 'migrants' will arrive to fill them. The madness has to stop!
Reply->
Ian Ogden • Feb 28, 2020 at 05:46
The people of the Greek islands are not in control of their own destiny. Their government does not seem to have their best interests at heart. They are controlled by the EU which has not got a clue as to how to prevent illegal immigration. I have a clue but it would not please the Woke?
Reply->
Meg Martel • Feb 28, 2020 at 05:34
What ever happened to staying home and fighting for your country?
Reply->
|
GET FREE EXCLUSIVE GATESTONE CONTENT:
Top Issues
|