Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Greek police again fire tear gas at migrants

Clashes at Turkey border persist as thousands camp out, hoping to cross to EU

- COSTAS KANTOURIS Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Elena Becatoros,Derek Gatopoulos and Suzan Fraser of The Associated Press.

THESSALONI­KI, Greece — Police on Greece’s border with Turkey used tear gas and water cannons Wednesday to repel hundreds of migrants clustered on the Turkish side who attempted to break down a border fence and enter Greece.

The evening clashes took place near the Kastanies border crossing. Greek police said Turkish authoritie­s also fired tear gas at Greek forces, and migrants later lit fires on the Turkish side of the fence.

Similar clashes occurred before dawn Wednesday, lasting for about two hours.

An estimated 2,000 migrants are still camped out on the Greek-Turkish border, weeks after Turkey declared its borders to Europe open and encouraged migrants and refugees living in the country to try crossing into European Union member Greece.

Tens of thousands of people headed to the frontier despite Greece’s insistence that its eastern border, which is also the EU’s external border, was shut. The move came after months of threats by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan that he would allow millions of refugees into Europe unless the EU provided more support for refugee care in Turkey.

The EU says it is adhering to a 2016 deal with Turkey under which it provides billions in funds in return for Turkey caring for more than 3.5 million refugees from neighborin­g Syria.

On Wednesday, Turkey declared that it was closing down its six land and sea border crossings with Greece and Bulgaria in an effort to contain the spread of the new coronaviru­s. But a senior Turkish official said that the measure did not amount to an end of Ankara’s policy of not preventing migrants from leaving Turkey.

The borders were sealed to people and not the transporta­tion of goods, the official added, speaking on condition of anonymity in line with Turkish government protocol.

The violence on the border took place hours after Erdogan held a four-way videoconfe­rence with the leaders of France, Germany and Britain to discuss the migrants crisis.

A statement from Erdogan’s office said the four leaders also discussed ways to resolve the Syria conflict and provide humanitari­an aid in Syria’s troubled Idlib province. It didn’t immediatel­y provide further details.

Tuesday’s teleconfer­ence among Erdogan, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, French President Emmanuel Macron and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson was arranged after the European leaders canceled plans to travel to Istanbul because of the coronaviru­s crisis.

The violence at the Greek-Turkish border has added to concerns in Athens over the high number of migrants arrivals from Turkey — at a rough average of 100 per day on the Greek islands so far this year — adding to severe crowding at refugee camps there.

Greek authoritie­s Wednesday imposed movement restrictio­ns, lasting for at least one month, at the island camps as part of public safety measures for the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Migrants on Lesbos and four other islands will be allowed to visit towns on the islands only in small groups and for limited periods, the Migration Affairs Ministry said. The ministry said that it was also speeding up plans to build detention facilities on the islands.

No infections have been confirmed at any of the camps, though the extent of testing at those sites remains unclear.

More than 9,300 people have reached Greece — mostly arriving on the eastern islands — from Turkey so far this year, although the rate has slowed over the past week.

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