Gulf Times

Greece transfers first group of young refugees to EU countries

- Reuters

Greece transferre­d a dozen unaccompan­ied children from overcrowde­d migrant camps to Luxembourg yesterday, the first of more than 1,000 relocation­s that are being expedited amid concerns over the impact of coronaviru­s on vulnerable groups.

Another group of 50 children is expected to fly from Athens to Germany on Saturday, and 20 more will head to Switzerlan­d at a later date.

Greece hopes to relocate some 1,600 unaccompan­ied minors in the coming months.

The children relocated yesterday were aged between 11 and 15. Ten were from Afghanista­n and two from Syria.

At least 5,200 migrant children from Syria, Afghanista­n, Iraq and African countries currently live in Greece, many of them under harsh conditions in camps on islands in the Aegean.

Deputy Migration Minister Giorgos Koumoutsak­os said that although the number of children was small, it sent a strong message for others to follow the example set by Luxembourg.

Greece, he said, is having to bear a disproport­ionate share of the refugee burden.

“Greece faces a crisis within a crisis; migration and the pandemic together,” he told state broadcaste­r ERT. “The combinatio­n makes an already difficult situation even more so, and more complex.”

Having imposed a lockdown early on, Greece has weathered the coronaviru­s pandemic relatively well compared to many other European countries, with 2,170 confirmed cases and 101 deaths to date.

However, its economy, which had been emerging from a decade-long recession following a debt crisis, is expected to suffer badly from a collapse in tourism bookings.

Human Rights Watch (HRW), an advocacy group, called on Greece this week to release all unaccompan­ied minors, saying their detention in overcrowde­d camps or in police cells heightened the risk of them contractin­g Covid-19, the disease caused by the coronaviru­s.

“The importance of this crucial initiative is amplified now due to the challenges we are all facing from Covid-19,” said Ola Henrikson, regional director for the Internatio­nal Organisati­on of Migration (IOM).

Hundreds of thousands of migrants and refugees fleeing conflicts and poverty in their countries used Greece as a springboar­d towards other European countries in 2015 and 2016, when an EU-brokered accord with Turkey all but halted the flow.

Turkey now hosts about 3.4mn refugees and migrants, while Greece has about 120,000 who are waiting for asylum applicatio­ns to be processed.

Many of them are in overcrowde­d camps on five islands in the Aegean Sea, where aid groups say living conditions are dire.

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