The Post

Burned-out migrants headed for new camp

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Greek police were moving hundreds of migrants to an army-built camp on the island of Lesbos yesterday after a fire destroyed an overcrowde­d facility, leaving them homeless for days.

Wearing masks and white coveralls, police escorted migrants camped out on a roadside to the new site in the island’s Kara Tepe area.

The notoriousl­y squalid Moria camp burned down last week, leaving more than 12,000 people in need of emergency shelter.

Yesterday’s operation included 70 female police officers and no violence was reported. ‘‘As long as it is peaceful, we believe it is a good move,’’ said Astrid Castelein, head of the UN Refugee Agency’s office on Lesbos. ‘‘Here on the street it is a risk for security, for public health, and it’s not dignity which we need for everyone.’’ Authoritie­s said the fires had been set deliberate­ly by a small group of inhabitant­s angered by Covid-19 lockdown restrictio­ns. Six Afghans have been arrested on suspicion of arson.

Most of the migrantsma­de homeless set up makeshift shelters made of sheets, blankets, reeds, and cardboard along a stretch of road near the gutted camp. The new site consists of large family tents erected in an old army shooting range by the sea. By late Thursday night, it had a capacity of around 8000 people, according to the UNHCR.

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