Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Afghan refugees forcefully pushed back by Greece relive horrible experience

Greek police officers’ brutal treatment of the Afghan refugees still haunts families, who feel “lucky” to have survived and appreciate the Turkish assistance

- ISTANBUL / DAILY SABAH WITH AA

AFGHAN refugees who were forcibly pushed back by Greek authoritie­s toward Turkey remember the violent incident with horror, saying they had to face the unimaginab­le at the most unexpected time.

Thirteen Afghan refugees were kicked out of migrant camps on the island of Lesbos on Feb. 18, through a rouse in which Greek officers told the migrants they would be vaccinated for the coronaviru­s before pushing them back to the Turkish coast. Rescued by the Turkish coast guard, eight of the migrants who were pushed back returned to Turkey’s central Karaman province where they have relatives.

of the migrants, Abdul Rauf, who returned to Karaman with his wife and two children, said that their journey to Greece started when they gave all their savings to a man in Turkey’s northweste­rn Çanakkale province who would help them cross to Lesbos.

According to Rauf, in Lesbos, they initially felt like everything was alright and the violent incident caught the family off guard.

“The Greek police officers told us that they will give us a coronaviru­s vaccine and they took us and out into a boat by force. When we resisted, they beat us. They have taken our documents and money, our everything,” he said, and added: “They pushed us through the sea and left us to die.”

Stating that even his 8-month pregnant wife was beaten by the Greek police officers, Rauf said they were saved thanks to Turkey.

“We called Turkish coast guard with a phone that we hid in our child’s back. They saved us. Turkish police officers also welcomed us. They ordered food and provided us with dry clothes,” he said, expressing how grateful he is to be alive. “We are very lucky,” he said. On Sunday, Turkey’s Foreign Ministry urged Greek authoritie­s once again to stop pushing asylum seekers back from their borders.

Urging Athens and “all elements involved in pushbacks” to end their violations

of internatio­nal and EU laws, human rights and a 2016 migration deal between the EU and Turkey, Turkey’s Foreign Ministry released a statement following two separate incidents on Feb. 23 and Feb. 24 when Greek forces assaulted groups of asylum seekers, took their valuables and left them stranded on an island in the middle of the Maritsa River between the two countries.

On both occasions, Turkish authoritie­s rescued a total of 51 asylum seekers and migrants – including women and children

– said the statement, adding that interviews with the migrants revealed that some were foreign nationals who came to Greece via Serbia and Bulgaria and were pushed back to Turkey.

Over 80,000 asylum seekers have been pushed back to Turkey in the last four years, it said, accusing Greece of conducting a “systematic policy” for years, pushing back migrants with the involvemen­t of the EU border agency Frontex.

It also called on the EU to monitor its

members’ implementa­tion of EU laws and the EU Charter of Fundamenta­l Rights “on the basis of human dignity.”

Earlier this month, six rights groups condemned what they said was the lack of an effective investigat­ion of reports that Greece is illegally pushing migrants back over the border into Turkey and that incidents “concern practices that even put in danger human lives, in addition to the inhumane treatment of people entitled to internatio­nal protection.” The signatorie­s included the Greek League for Human Rights and the Hellenic Council for Refugees.

Frontex is currently under investigat­ion by the European Anti-Fraud Office (OLAF), the EU’s independen­t corruption watchdog, over allegation­s of illegal pushbacks of migrants arriving in Greek waters from Turkey. Members of the European Parliament and activists have called for Frontex head Fabrice Leggeri to resign over the operations, but he has refused to do so, insisting his agency is key to the fight against human traffickin­g.

Turkey and Greece have been key transit points for migrants aiming to cross into Europe, fleeing war and persecutio­n to start new lives. Turkey has also accused Greece of large-scale pushbacks and summary deportatio­ns without access to asylum procedures, which is a violation of internatio­nal law. It also accuses the EU of turning a blind eye to what it says is a blatant abuse of human rights.

Destker Dolit, 18, is yet another Afghan refugee, who was just landed in Lesbos when the push back took place. Dolit said police officers welcomed them when they arrived on the island and took them to a refugee camp. Then, an officer came and told them they would receive a coronaviru­s vaccine and brought them to a room, where they had to wait for hours.

“Occasional­ly, a Greek police officer was coming and checking on us. They made us wait in there for a really long time. The Greek police officers have taken our documents, belongings and money forcibly and never gave them back. Then, they brought us to the coast and tried to get into a boat,” he remembers. In Dolit’s opinion, the police were more violent toward the women than the man during the process.

After returning to Turkey, Dolit called his relatives, demanding help and they eventually settled in Karaman.

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 ??  ?? A migrant swims back toward Turkey after attempting to enter Greece by crossing the Maritsa river, March 1, 2020.
A migrant swims back toward Turkey after attempting to enter Greece by crossing the Maritsa river, March 1, 2020.

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