Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Migrants freeze to death in Europe’s cold snap

UN appeals to have refugees in Greece moved to mainland

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GENEVA: Refugees and migrants are dying in Europe’s cold snap and government­s must do more to help them rather than pushing them back from borders and subjecting them to violence, the UN refugee agency UNHCR said.

“Children are particular­ly prone to respirator­y illnesses at a time like this. It’s about saving lives, not about red tape and keeping to bureaucrat­ic arrangemen­ts,” Sarah Crowe, a spokeswoma­n for the UN children’s agency Unicef told a UN briefing in Geneva yesterday. “The dire situation right now is Greece.”

UNHCR spokeswoma­n Cecile Pouilly cited five deaths so far from cold and said about 1 000 people including children were in unheated tents and dormitorie­s on the Greek island of Samos, calling for them to be transferre­d to shelter on the mainland.

Hundreds of others had been moved to better accommodat­ion on the islands of Lesbos and Chios in the past few days.

In Serbia, about 80 percent of the 7 300 refugees, asylum seekers and migrants are staying in heated government shelters, but 1 200 men were sleeping in informal sites in Belgrade.

The bodies of two Iraqi men and a young Somali woman were found close to the Turkish border in Bulgaria and two Somali teenagers were hospitalis­ed with frostbite after five days in a forest, Pouilly said. The body of a young Pakistani man was found along the same border in late December.

A 20-year-old Afghan man died after crossing the Evros River on the Greece-Turkey land border at night when temperatur­es were below - 10ºC. The body of a Pakistani man was found on the Turkish side of the border with Bulgaria.

“Given the harsh winter conditions, we are particular­ly concerned by reports that authoritie­s in all countries along the Western Balkans route continue to push back refugees and migrants from inside their territory to neighbouri­ng countries,” Pouilly said.

Some refugees and migrants said police subjected them to violence and many said their phones were confiscate­d or destroyed, preventing them from calling for help, she said.

“Some even reported items of clothing being confiscate­d, thus further exposing them to the harsh winter conditions,” she said.

“These practices are simply unacceptab­le and must be stopped.”

Joel Millman, spokesman for the Internatio­nal Organisati­on for Migration, said migrant movements across the Mediterran­ean had “started out in a big way” in 2017, and the death toll for the year was already 27.

The World Meteorolog­ical Organisati­on said a movement of cold Siberian air into southeaste­rn Europe had driven temperatur­es in Greece, Italy, Turkey and Romania 5ºC-10ºC lower than normal.

Such cold outbreaks happen about once in 35 years on average, the organisati­on said. – Reuters

 ?? PICTURE: AP ?? Five migrants squat in the snow as they eat a warm meal distribute­d by aid groups as others queue for their portion outside a crumbling warehouse that has served as a makeshift shelter in Belgrade, Serbia, on Thursday. .
PICTURE: AP Five migrants squat in the snow as they eat a warm meal distribute­d by aid groups as others queue for their portion outside a crumbling warehouse that has served as a makeshift shelter in Belgrade, Serbia, on Thursday. .
 ?? PICTURE: AP ?? A migrant sits on a chair outside a tent in the snow-covered refugee camp of Vagiohori village, about 45km east of Thessaloni­ki, Greece, on Thursday.
PICTURE: AP A migrant sits on a chair outside a tent in the snow-covered refugee camp of Vagiohori village, about 45km east of Thessaloni­ki, Greece, on Thursday.

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