Kuwait Times

Greece extends lockdown of migrant camps

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ATHENS: Greece announced on Saturday another extension of the coronaviru­s lockdown on its teeming migrant camps, hours after some 2,000 people protested in central Athens to mark World Refugee Day and denounce the government’s treatment of migrants.The migration ministry said confinemen­t for residents of reception and identifica­tion centers across the country would be extended to July 5. It was due to have ended on Monday.

Greece was quick to introduce strict confinemen­t measures on migrant camps on March 21 and imposed a more general lockdown on March 23.While no known coronaviru­s deaths have been recorded in the camps so far and only a few dozen infections have surfaced, the measures have since been extended a number of times. Rights groups have expressed concern that migrants’ rights have been eroded by the restrictio­ns.

Earlier on Saturday, members of anti-racist groups, joined by refugees from migrant camps, marched in central Athens, holding banners proclaimin­g “No refugee homeless, persecuted, jailed” and chanting slogans against evictions of refugees from temporary accommodat­ion in apartments. Thousands face homelessne­ss as Greek authoritie­s plan to move more than 11,000 people to make room for other asylum seekers currently living in dismal island camps.

Refugees used to be able to keep their accommodat­ion for up to six months after receiving protected status.The new conservati­ve government of Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis has reduced this to just a month. The government insists that it is doing everything necessary “to assure a smooth transition for those who leave their lodgings”. The United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees (UNHCR) has voiced concern, stressing that many of the refugees do not have effective access to social benefits and support.

In a message for World Refugee Day, the Ministry for Migration and Asylum said Greece has found itself “at the center of the migration crisis bearing a disproport­ionate burden”. “The country is safeguardi­ng the rights of those who are really persecuted and operates as a shield of solidarity in the eastern Mediterran­ean,” it added. Government officials have repeatedly said Greece must become a less attractive destinatio­n for asylum seekers. The continued presence of more than 32,000 asylum seekers on the islands – over five times the intended capacity of shelters there – has caused major friction with local communitie­s who are demanding their immediate removal. An operation in February to build new camps on the islands of Lesbos and Chios had to be abandoned due to violent protests. Rights groups have repeatedly criticized unhygienic and unsafe living conditions in existing camps.

 ?? — AFP ?? ATHENS: Migrants and solidarity groups carry a banner as they participat­e in a rally on Saturday marking World Refugee Day, as they demand rights and housing for refugees and migrants in Greece.
— AFP ATHENS: Migrants and solidarity groups carry a banner as they participat­e in a rally on Saturday marking World Refugee Day, as they demand rights and housing for refugees and migrants in Greece.

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