Shut migrant camps, demand Greeks
ATHENS: Residents of outlying Greek islands urged authorities on Thursday to shut overcrowded migrant camps that host thousands of asylum seekers.
Hundreds protested peacefully outside Greece’s interior ministry in central Athens, holding placards against the creation of new detention facilities on five islands.
“Our islands should not be warehouses of souls,” read one banner.
“These people live in terrible conditions in the mud,” said Theodora Kokkinelli, 50, whose parents live in Moria village on Lesbos. Moria is a hamlet near a sprawling camp that Greek authorities plan to replace with a detention facility elsewhere on the island.
The Moria camp was built to accommodate 2,840 people but housed 19,500 on Feb.12, according to the latest official count by Greek authorities.
“My biggest fear is that these people, some time, will revolt” said Kostas Moutzouris, the prefect of the North Aegean administrative region.
Migrants on Lesbos protested last week over their living conditions, while residents staged their own protests demanding the facilities close. Locals have been particularly angered by government plans to build new detention centres, worried that new centres will signals permanency.
Greek authorities on Monday announced plans to accelerate the construction of detention facilities on Lesbos, Chios, Samos, Kos and Leros islands. The islands are close to Turkey, from where thousands of asylum seekers head to Europe each year. “These new facilities are just an extension of the existing camps,” said Costas Vrachnis, 60, a restaurateur from Samos. “Our island is getting negative publicity, tourists hear Samos and turn the other way,” he said.
Separately, police in North Macedonia have found 53 migrants crammed into a truck in a southeastern border region and arrested the driver on suspicion of belonging to a trafficking gang, officials said on Thursday.
A police statement said the vehicle was stopped during a routine check late Wednesday near the town of Valandovo, which is close to North Macedonia’s borders with Greece and Bulgaria.
Police said 37 of the migrants were from Afghanistan, 12 were Pakistanis, two were Indians and there was one Iraqi and one Egyptian. The driver was identified as a 43-year-old man from North Macedonia.