The Palm Beach Post

Migrants clash with Macedonian police

Officers then let small groups cross border, head north.

- By Dusan Stojanovic Associated Press

IDOMENI, GREECE — Macedonian police fired stun grenades Friday to disperse thousands of migrants stuck in a no man’s land with Greece and clashed with them as they desperatel­y tried to rush over the border, a day after Macedonia’s government declared a state of emergency on the frontier to halt a human tide heading north to the European Union.

About 3,000 migrants who spent the night in the open made several attempts to charge the police — and some hurled stones at the Macedonian forces. At least eight people were injured in the melee, according to Greek police.

Machine gun-toting police backed by armored vehicles spread coils of razor wire over rail tracks used by migrants to cross on foot from Greece to Macedonia, and the army was deployed Friday to the border areas. Macedonia shut the border to crossings on Thursday.

Hours after Friday’s clashes, however, Macedonian police started letting small groups of families with children cross by walking along railway tracks to a station in the Macedonian town of Gevgelija, where most take trains to the border with Serbia.

“They are letting groups of about 30-40 people go, probably because they want to control the rush into Mace- donia,” said a Syrian who gave only his first name, Hassan. He was walking with his family and children over a rusty bridge toward Gevgelija. “I think they’ll let all of us go eventually.”

Dozens of people fainted as they tried to position themselves in the line to cross, with riot police pushing them back with shields. Women and children wept in the chaot- ic scenes that left many migrants stranded for another night on the dusty field.

Among the injured was a youngster who was bleeding from what appeared to be shrapnel from the stun grenades that were fired directly into the crowd. A man holding a baby got tangled in razor wire separating the two sides.

The migrants, many with babies and young children, spent the chilly and windy night in a dusty field on the border without food and with little water. Some ate corn they picked from nearby fields.

“I don’t know why are they doing this to us,” said Mohammad Wahid, an Iraqi. “I don’t have passport or identity documents. I cannot return and have nowhere to go. I will stay here till the end.”

Aurelie Ponthieu, a Doctors Without Borders adviser, said in a statement that Macedonian authoritie­s used violence against harmless and vulnerable people.

 ?? BORIS GRDANOSKI / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A migrant helps a woman who collapsed while the migrants were pushing against police to enter Macedonia on the border with Greece, near the southern Macedonian town of Gevgelija, on Friday.
BORIS GRDANOSKI / ASSOCIATED PRESS A migrant helps a woman who collapsed while the migrants were pushing against police to enter Macedonia on the border with Greece, near the southern Macedonian town of Gevgelija, on Friday.

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