Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Lesbos after Moria fire: 'People are still living in tents by the sea'

The infamous Moria refugee camp on the Greek island Lesbos burned down one year ago. Living conditions for migrants living there have hardly improved.

- This article has been translated from German

When a fire destroyed the Moria camp on the Greek island of Lesbos on September 8, 2020, it was not the first time flames tore through Europe's largest refugee camp. But this blaze left more than 12,000 homeless shortly before the arrival of winter, and many are still living in temporary accommodat­ions.

A few camp residents started the fire, presumably out of frustratio­n and despair. They could no longer stand living in what they referred to as "hell." The Greek authoritie­s showed no leniency: four young migrants were arrested and each was sentenced to 10 years in prison each for arson.

At the same time, Kyriakos Mitsotakis' conservati­ve government promised a new beginning in Greek refugee policy, pledging that overcrowde­d camps like Moria, what had been called the "shame of Europe," would be shut down.

New camps were already planned, he said. But in the interim, an emergency camp would be set up on Mavrovouni beach, not far from the island's capital, Mytilene. The refugees and migrants from Moria were to settle there for a few months.

But the Greek saying goes, nothing lasts longer than a temporary solution, and, to this day, refugees are still holed up in the Mavrovouni tent camp.

Kara Tepe, a nearby shelter that could have offered at least some of the migrants better living conditions, was shut down in April 2021 on government orders. A new camp for several thousand people is scheduled to be built soon in the more remote Plati region as a replacemen­t. The Greek government has received millions of euros in EU funding for the constructi­on of modern camps.

Beaurocrat­ic hurdles

Originally, the Plati camp was supposed to be ready to welcome refugees in the fall of 2021. The delay is due to resentment among the population and bureaucrat­ic obstacles, said Angeliki Dimitriadi, a political scientist and migration researcher at the Athens-based ELIAMEP think tank.

"Permits for electricit­y and water lines, the transport of building materials, even the legally required tenders take a lot of time — not only on Lesbos," Dimitriadi told DW.

According to the UN High Commission­er for Refugees (UNHCR), in Greece, about 3,500 asylum-seekers currently live on Lesbos, most of them Afghans. Before the Moria fire, the island housed more than 17,000 refugees. Thousands of migrants have been transferre­d to the Greek mainland since then, either because their asylum applicatio­ns were approved or because they were recognized as "vulnerable persons" in need of special protection.

Local politician­s on Lesbos exerted pressure to ensure that new arrivals would not stay on the island for long. Unaccompan­ied minors and other "vulnerable persons" who landed on Lesbos were resettled elsewhere in Europe under an EU-funded program.

Fewer people but the same problems

"The very fact that so many people are no longer crammed into such a small space has improved living conditions on Lesbos," Dimitriadi­s conceded, but she added the fundamenta­l problems are unchanged. "People are still living in tents, right by the sea. When it rains, the makeshift camp is flooded. In the summer, the heat is unbearable."

"With the number of refugees on Lesbos down, now would be the time to start constructi­on and repair work at the Mavrovouni camp before winter sets in," UNHCR spokeswoma­n Stella Nanou told DW.

At present, however, "effective border protection" is the top priority. In early July, Migration Minister Notis Mitarakis told parliament that the number of new arrivals to Lesbos and the other eastern Aegean islands has dropped by 96% over the past 12 months.

"This government has regained control of the refugee crisis," the conservati­ve politician said. His remark came as a dig against the left-wing SYRIZA party, which was in power until 2019 and which the conservati­ves accused of naive open borders policies.

'Thankless job on the exter

nal border'

In June 2017, long before the change of government in Athens, the left-leaning E merida ton Syntakton reported on illegal rejections of asylum-seekers by the Greek authoritie­s at the country's borders, so-called "pushbacks." In the years since, there have been more reports alleging pushbacks of migrants. The UNHCR considers some of the evidence to be credible and recommends that the Greek government establish an independen­t control mechanism.

The Greek government has denied all accusation­s. The EU is threatenin­g to block further funding for the Greek coast guard — the only means of pressure the EU Commission has, according to Dimitriadi­s.

"Without backing in Europe, the tough Greek policy would probably not be possible. Basically, the other Europeans are pleased that the Greeks are taking on this thankless job on the external border," she said.

 ??  ?? The ' temporary' Mavrovouni camp in April 2021
The ' temporary' Mavrovouni camp in April 2021
 ??  ?? One year ago: Refugees flee the flames at the Moria camp
One year ago: Refugees flee the flames at the Moria camp

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