Jamaica Gleaner

Greece to move 2,000 out of overcrowde­d Lesbos migrant camp

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ATHENS (AP):

SOME 2,000 asylum seekers will be moved out of a severely overcrowde­d migrant camp on the Greek island of Lesbos this month, a Greek official said yesterday as charities slammed conditions at the camp, which has raw sewage running out of its main entrance.

Government spokesman Dimitris Tzanakopou­los said those being moved out of the Moria camp, which houses 9,000 people in a facility built for 3,100, will be sent to the mainland so their asylum claims can be examined.

“The situation in Moria is indeed difficult, it is indeed at the limit,” Tzanakopou­los said.

Regional governor Christina Kalogirou had threatened to shut down the facility unless the Greek government improves conditions at Moria.

Doctors Without Borders has called for the emergency evacuation of vulnerable people at the camp to the mainland and other European Union countries, citing an increase in suicide attempts and self-harm among children in Moria and cases of sexual attack.

“This is the third year that Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) has been calling on the Greek authoritie­s and the EU (European Union) to take responsibi­lity for their collective failures and to put in place sustainabl­e solutions to avoid this catastroph­ic situation,” said Louise Roland-Gosselin, MSF’s head of mission in Greece. “It is time to immediatel­y evacuate the most vulnerable to safe accommodat­ion in other European countries and to stop this never-ending cycle of emergency decongesti­ons and the horrendous conditions we continue to witness in Moria.”

Thousands of people fleeing violence and poverty at home are still arriving at Greek islands from the nearby Turkish coast. Between Friday and Sunday, more than 600 reached Lesbos alone.

Under a 2016 deal between the EU and Turkey designed to halt the flow of refugees and migrants into Europe, those arriving on Greek islands are held in detention camps there and face deportatio­n back to Turkey unless their asylum applicatio­ns are approved.

But the massive backlog of applicatio­ns has led to severe overcrowdi­ng on the Greek island camps, even as authoritie­s move hundreds of vulnerable people to the mainland.

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