Gulf Today

Greece begins moving migrants to new camp

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SAMOS: Greece on Monday began moving asylum seekers to the first of several new Eu-funded “closed” camps on its islands, hours ater a fire torched a part of the the current facility.

Rights groups oppose the new camps, saying that the strict access measures in them are too restrictiv­e.

“Today is a historic day...a day of joy for us,” Manos Logothetis, general secretary for asylum at the Greek migration ministry, told state TV ERT at the island of Samos.

Logothetis said that out of some 400 people at the current Vathy camp at Samos, 270 have said that they want to move to the new Zervou facility.

The first bus with 22 people on board was already heading to Zervou, Logothetis said.

The ministry is prepared to register up to 200 people today and the remainder on Tuesday, he said.

Late on Sunday a major fire that broke out in an abandoned part of the Vathy camp, with the ministry saying no-one was hurt.

Logothetis on Monday told ERT it was “habitual” for asylum seekers to sort through their belongings ahead of a camp move, and torch anything they did not intend to bring with them.

“It was not a surprise, we were prepared for this,” he said.

According to the ministry, all the asylum-seekers had been evacuated to an empty space near the entrance of the camp as firefighte­rs tackled the blaze.

The new Samos facility is the first of several such camps on five Greek islands created with EU funds. A double barbed wire fence surrounds the 12,000-square-metre camp, which is also installed with surveillan­ce cameras, x-ray scanners and magnetic doors.

It also includes a detention centre for migrants whose asylum claims have been rejected and who will be sent back to Turkey.

Logothetis said the new restricted-access camps offer “safety and humanitari­an values,” but rights groups say the measures are too restrictiv­e.

The local community, which had for years demanded the relocation of all the migrants to mainland Greece and Europe, has also opposed the constructi­on of the new Zervou camp.

The Vathy camp on Samos, which is near Turkey, sheltered nearly 7,000 asylum-seekers between 2015 and 2016.

It was only built to take in 680 people, and campaigner­s had long denounced conditions as deplorable.

 ?? Agence France-presse ?? ↑
A refugee carries her 16-day-old baby at the old Vathy camp, waiting to be transferre­d to the new Samos RIC on Monday.
Agence France-presse ↑ A refugee carries her 16-day-old baby at the old Vathy camp, waiting to be transferre­d to the new Samos RIC on Monday.

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