Daily Mail

Europe’s child migrant shame

In mud and squalor, up to 6,000 youngsters are trapped in wretched Greek camp – all because Brussels STILL can’t fix asylum nightmare

- From David Churchill

THEY are conditions so squalid that no adult – let alone a child – should be expected to endure them.

Yet thousands of youngsters are living in Europe’s largest migrant camp over Christmas – where they are exposed to violence, forced to go without medicine and bed down in paper-thin tents as temperatur­es approach 0C at night.

Poor sanitation, no hot water, lack of food, smoke from makeshift stoves and torrents of mud created by winter downpours have led to a surge in chronic diseases in children at the Moria camp on the Greek island of Lesbos.

But under European Union rules, they must remain living in filth, with litter piling up around their wretched homes, while their families’ asylum applicatio­ns are considered.

Many are left in limbo for months as Greece’s public sector struggles with applicatio­ns after a surge in arrivals from Turkey this year. But a school set up in the shanty town on Lesbos – which is more accustomed to hosting a sea of tourists – has given children hope.

Some spoke of returning to their homelands to help restore law and order to the chaos which caused their families to flee. Others told of using the lessons they’re receiving to achieve their dream of settling in Europe and becoming doctors, nurses or policemen.

About 6,000 children are living in the camp. The majority are 12 and under and live in containers or tents with their families, who are claiming asylum having fled persecutio­n or war. Some 1,149 of the children are unaccompan­ied.

Zekria Farzad, 40, has set up the Wave of Hope school in the camp offering lessons in English, German and French – the countries where most want to eventually reach.

Mr Farzad, an asylum seeker himself, said: ‘We started the school because it gives them something to focus on and gives them hope.’ Nazila Khairah, 11, said: ‘Living in Afghanista­n is really dangerous and I don’t want to go back there.

‘I have become really afraid of my environmen­t in the camp because I see people fighting with each other.

‘Learning English is a really good feeling for us and for me. When we go back to our tents we become really angry and we always want to come back to the school. I want to go to Germany and become a doctor.’

The youngster, who lives in a tent with her parents and four siblings, said she had a message for EU leaders. In a direct appeal, she said: ‘Please get us out of here!’

Five volunteer teachers give about 500 pupils lessons in two classrooms with whiteboard­s, while children are given textbooks and writing materials. They can also take art classes, offered as therapy for traumatic events experience­d either in the camp or back in their homelands.

Mahsa Sulaming, from Afghanista­n, said she wanted to return to her homeland and become a police officer. The 11-year-old, who lives in a tent with her parents, said: ‘ My dream is to live in a house and have a comfortabl­e life and return back to my homeland to be a police officer so

‘Please get us out of here’

I can help it be better.’ She added: ‘Living in tents is hard. The most difficult part is to sleep in the tent and go in the food lines – sometimes we wait for three hours.’

The parents of all the children said they paid smugglers thousands of pounds to reach the island by boat from Turkey, visible from Lesbos’s north coast. They travelled through Iran and Turkey by car.

The camp was built to house only 3,000, but now hosts 18,500 – up from 7,000 this time last year.

As a result, migrants have set up a sprawling Calais Jungle-style camp in olive groves next to a government­run facility where hundreds of new arrivals are bussed in every week.

Charity Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) runs a clinic opposite the camp where dozens of mothers and fathers queue daily pleading for medical assistance for young children.

Marco Sandrone, 36, the MSF coordinato­r in charge, said increasing numbers of children were even selfharmin­g and have told its psychologi­sts that they want to die.

He added: ‘We have a long list of children with complex diseases. It can be epileptic children, cardiac complicati­ons, diabetes, respirator­y problems and even cancer. Newborn babies are living in tents which are just 5C or under at night, walking around in mud. It’s a huge problem.’

Several aid workers have told of reports of women in the camp being driven into prostituti­on in exchange for food, medicine or money.

And families spoke of violence breaking out in front of them.

The EU’s so- called Dublin rules mean migrants have to stay in the first country in which they arrive in order to be processed. Member states on the frontline have for years been calling for reform of the rules so more countries can share the burden.

Charities also partly blame the EU’s deal with Turkey to curb migrant flows in 2016 for the worsening conditions. They say it makes it harder for migrants to move to the mainland from the Greek islands once they have arrived and lodged their asylum applicatio­n, leading to a build-up of people.

A spokesman for new EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said she accepted the need for reform, adding: ‘A new pact on migration and asylum is a priority of the von der Leyen Commission. We have started intensive work to that end.’

About 70 per cent of Moria camp residents are from Afghanista­n, 13 per cent from Syria and 4 per cent from African countries. More than 70,000 have arrived in Greece this year – more than double last year.

THOUSANDS of children languishin­g in flimsy tents in near-zero temperatur­es at night, with no access to medicines and subject to violence. This is the hell of the Moria refugee camp. And it’s here – in 21stcentur­y Europe.

This cockpit of human misery on the Greek island of Lesbos is an indictment of the European Union’s broken migrant policy. Some 6,000 children live there, 1,100 alone.

These young asylum seekers exist in a tortured limbo, unable to return to wartorn homes or move on. The EU promises a new migration pact. But these children don’t need politics, they need practical help – and now. Human decency demands it.

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