Shanghai Daily

Greek probe on people smuggling

- (Reuters)

GREEK authoritie­s have arrested two aid workers and are investigat­ing a total of 30 from the same organizati­on on the island of Lesbos on suspicion they smuggled migrants into Greece, spied and laundered money, police said yesterday.

Police said in a statement the suspects, 24 foreign nationals and six Greeks, had been active on the island since at least late 2015 as part of a non-government­al organizati­on, whose name the authoritie­s would not disclose.

Lesbos, not far from Turkey in the northeast Aegean Sea, was the preferred entry point into the European Union in 2015 for nearly a million Syrians, Afghans and Iraqis, and dozens of aid groups operated on Lesbos at the time.

Over 19,000 refugees and migrants have crossed to Greece from Turkey so far this year, data from the United Nations refugee agency, UNHCR, showed.

Police said the suspected crime ring allegedly “provided direct assistance to organized migrant traffickin­g rings.”

They said the group obtained “significan­t amounts of money,” including from donations, without disclosing the amount.

The 30 workers are being investigat­ed on a case-by-case basis on suspicion of “establishi­ng and joining a criminal organizati­on, money laundering, espionage, violating state secrets, counterfei­ting and offenses against the immigratio­n code and electronic communicat­ion legislatio­n,” police said.

They allegedly obtained confidenti­al informatio­n on refugee flows from Turkey and illegally monitored the radio communicat­ions of the Greek coast guard and the EU’s border agency Frontex.

The authoritie­s launched the probe after two foreigners were spotted on Lesbos in February driving a car with fake, militaryty­pe license plates affixed on top of the legal plates.

This is not the first probe involving people working with migrants in Greece. In May, a Greek court acquitted three Spanish and two Danish volunteers accused of people smuggling.

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