Arab Times

Refugees cling to hope in ‘homes’

EU border agency warns of risks from fake passports

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LEEUWARDEN, Netherland­s, Dec 20, (Agencies): Seven-month-old Adam’s nights are restless. The din and chatter of 600 other asylum seekers sharing a “camp” in the north of the Netherland­s keeps this youngest resident awake, and his parents anxious.

“Home” -- their fifth in three months -- is a flimsy plywood cubicle they occupy with two other Iraqi families in a cavernous exhibition centre-turnedshel­ter.

But there is no door, no ceiling -and no chance for more sleep when the huge white lights go on each day at 7:00 am.

“This isn’t life. How can I explain it?” says Adam’s 27-year-old father Ahmad. “It’s like a bird in a cage. It eats and drinks but it’s not happy.”

All is a far cry from the vision that kept Ahmad and his hazel-eyed wife Alia, 26, going as they trod, baby in sling, the migrant route to Europe last September, with a team of AFP journalist­s in tow.

Three months on, they feel trapped in a labyrinth of sluggish, soulless administra­tive steps -- though the joy of watching Adam grow out of harm’s way encourages their patience.

“Our journey is not over,” says Ahmad, sitting on the edge of his unmade bed.

The boy can almost stand, and he can now say “Mama, Baba”. His playfulnes­s is a welcome break both for his parents and some fellow asylum seekers, who like Ahmad and Alia left all behind.

The young Iraqi owned an upscale garment shop in Baghdad. Now, like the others in the shelter, he has to wear a blue plastic bracelet when he goes out to identify him as a “camp” resident.

“We still don’t know what fate has in store for us ... whether or not we will have a residence permit,” he says.

Ahmad understand­s the Netherland­s is “crowded” with a record number of asylum requests, but he can’t shake the fear that Dutch authoritie­s may one day send them back to Iraq.

He also worries that attitudes towards refugees have changed since the deadly Paris attacks.

“People used to say hello to us on the street, they used to welcome us. Now they don’t any more,” he says.

His family’s situation mirrors that of hundreds of thousands of others, uncomforta­bly accommodat­ed by overwhelme­d European authoritie­s who have commandeer­ed sports halls and other civic buildings.

Nearly a million people fleeing war and misery reached Europe’s shores this year.

When Ahmad and Alia survived a bomb attack in Baghdad in 2014, they too decided to risk all and crossed the Aegean Sea this summer.

Peak

Through seven countries in as many days at the peak of the migrant crisis, they slept rough in the Balkans, dodged arrest and handed smugglers their life savings -- 9,000 euros ($10,000) -- to have a chance at life in Europe.

Their goal was the Netherland­s, where they have family in Utrecht, a city whose picturesqu­e setting is far from the makeshift shelters they’ve passed through before they were assigned to Leeuwarden, a town of some 100,000 residents where they arrived on October 16.

It took authoritie­s five weeks to register the couple’s asylum request.

“I felt that the Netherland­s didn’t want us, like it was telling us to leave,” said Ahmad.

With 54,000 requests registered in 2015 by mid-November, the authoritie­s concede they are overwhelme­d.

“We have a backlog, and that sometimes causes friction,” says Alet Bowmeester, spokeswoma­n for the Central Agency for the Reception of Asylum Seekers.

With little to do but wait, the couple look for ways to lift their spirits.

“Every morning, my friends and I get together in a room that we have assigned as the make-up room. We go there to get dressed, put on make up and do our hair,” says Alia, who still bears scars on her face from the 2014 bombing.

Once a week the family goes to Mouni, a kebab restaurant in the heart of Leeuwarden that is popular among refugees.

“It isn’t the same as the food in Iraq but it’s nice to eat something that reminds us of home,” says Alia.

They then join a group of Syrians and Iraqis on a day trip to the zoo -- a rare treat that is sponsored by a local church -- where the main attraction is a herd of seals in the middle of a pond. Zookeepers take visitors out on a wooden boat to watch at feeding time, but even a fun outing can revive trauma.

The children love it but many older visitors are terrified in the small boat, paralysed with fear at the memory of the perilous sea crossing to Greece’s shores.

Alia has her own demons that rear up every time she hears a loud noise and remembers the bombing she survived. Their Balkan odyssey was also “a nightmare” but one her mind has mostly erased.

Asked whether she is happier in the Netherland­s, she says: “Of course this is better, it’s much better. There’s no sea, there’s no running, no fear, no one will come hurt or steal from us.”

Yet like Ahmad, she too fears they might not be cleared to stay there. “I think about it. I think that we might not succeed, that we might be sent back. So this frightens me very much.”

Keen to stay positive, Ahmad joins a group of eight Syrians and Eritreans learning Dutch with a volunteer teacher. “In five years time ... I hope I will

Ex-deputy minister held:

Armenia said Saturday it had arrested the nation’s former deputy defence minister on suspicion of ties to a “criminal group” accused of plotting to assassinat­e politician­s in the become a Dutch citizen, so that I can travel all over the world,” he says.

BERLIN:

Also:

The head of the European Union’s border agency has said the large number of refugees entering Europe poses a security risk, with civil war making it harder to check the authentici­ty of Syrian passports.

Hundreds of thousands of people fleeing war and poverty in countries such as Syria and Iraq have arrived in Europe this year. Since last month’s attacks in Paris, concern has grown that Islamist militants could enter undetected among the influx.

“The big inflows of people who are currently entering Europe unchecked are of course a security risk,” Frontex head Fabrice Leggeri told German newspaper Welt am Sonntag, though he also said it would be wrong to regard all refugees as “potential terrorists.”

In Paris, a Syrian passport was found near the dead body of one of the attackers and his fingerprin­ts matched those of a person registered as arriving in October in Greece, the main entry point for refugees and migrants.

Leggeri said that in a country going through civil war like Syria no one could guarantee that “the documents that look real are really issued by an official authority or are really being carried by their rightful owner.”

Diplomats said earlier this month European countries have circulated a watch list of missing Syrian and Iraqi passports they fear could be filled with false data and used by people to travel to Europe and beyond. Such documents are harder to identify than outright fakes.

One diplomat said the list contained serial numbers of thousands of genuine blank passports that were held in government offices in parts of Syria and Iraq that have since been captured by armed groups including Islamic State.

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