Vancouver Sun

EU warns economic migrants to stay home

- NICHOLAS PAPHITIS AND ELENA BECATOROS

ATHENS, Greece — The European Union’s leader chose the continent’s main gateway for immigrants Thursday to bluntly warn economic migrants not to even think of coming to Europe, while promising to work for a solution to the more immediate problem of refugees.

“I want to appeal to all potential illegal economic migrants, wherever you are from — do not come to Europe,” European Council president Donald Tusk said in Athens. “Do not risk your lives and your money. It is all for nothing. Greece, (and) any other European country, will no longer be a transit country.”

While people seeking a better life are among the migrants building up in Greece, the majority of arrivals are refugees from war and persecutio­n. They aim to leave financiall­y wrecked Greece to seek asylum in a country that can offer them more, such as Germany or Sweden.

But a series of restrictio­ns imposed by Austria and other countries — first on economic migrants, but most recently on refugees — has created a bottleneck in Greece. While nearly 2,000 people arrive on Greek islands every day, Greece’s northern neighbour, Macedonia, allows only a few hundred through, on a good day, and only Syrian and Iraqi nationals.

Tusk, who is touring countries affected by the mass movement of people through Europe, said the situation along the Western Balkan migration route is “really dramatic, and so we must act with determinat­ion to improve it.”

Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras called Thursday for sanctions on EU states that refuse to take in their share of the incoming refugees, and demanded that the procedure for relocating refugees stranded in Greece to other members of the bloc should be drasticall­y accelerate­d.

After his meeting with Tusk, Tsipras promised “dignified” living conditions for the more than 25,000 people — mostly bona fide refugees — trapped in Greece. But he insisted that the solution must be temporary, and Greece will accept no more than its fair share of permanent refugees.

At least 10,000 men, women and children have been camped for days at the Idomeni border crossing with Macedonia. Protests have been frequent, and this week Macedonian police used tear gas and stun grenades to repel hundreds of Syrians and Iraqis who had torn down a border gate.

On Thursday, a group of frustrated migrants blocked a freight rail line at Idomeni in protest Macedonia’s refusal to let them in.

Macedonian authoritie­s have said they will let in only as many people as the next country on the route, Serbia, takes. Greek police said that in the 24 hours to 6 a.m. Thursday, 500 people were allowed to cross.

Some of those, however, were then turned back by Macedonian authoritie­s who said their papers were not in order.

The migrants said Macedonia did not accept computer-generated stamps issued by the Greek police, and therefore they could not prove their identity documents were genuine.

 ?? VADIM GHIRDA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A child falls while walking with a man on the railway tracks near the border between Greece and Macedonia in the Greek village of Idomeni on Thursday.
VADIM GHIRDA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A child falls while walking with a man on the railway tracks near the border between Greece and Macedonia in the Greek village of Idomeni on Thursday.

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