Los Angeles Times

Greece to start ousting migrants

Thousands are expected to be returned to Turkey as part of a broader European agreement.

- By Maria Petrakis and Glen Johnson Special correspond­ents Petrakis and Johnson reported from Athens and Istanbul, Turkey, respective­ly.

ATHENS — Amid protests and widespread criticism, Greece on Monday is poised to begin implementi­ng a plan that will see thousands of migrants returned to Turkey, part of a broader deal aiming to stem the massive f low of people from Turkish shores to mainland Europe.

About 750 migrants are expected to be deported to Turkey under tight security over the coming days aboard two vessels chartered by Frontex, the European Union’s border agency, the state- run Greek news agency reported.

The plan, forged between the EU and Turkey after months of tense negotiatio­ns, has drawn withering criticism from rights groups and spurred unrest in refugee camps and reception centers across Greece.

“We have seen growing tension, anxiety and even bouts of violence,” said Boris Cheshirkov, a spokesman for the Office of the United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees, on Lesbos, one of the Greek islands most acutely affected by the migration increase of the last year. “Many people fear that they will be returned to Turkey.”

Since Thursday, migrants and refugees have staged protests and intermitte­ntly clashed with Greeks and even one another. Greek news media on Sunday broadcast images of migrants streaming toward Chios Island’s main port in protest of the deal.

Riots on that island late last week “left three people with stab injuries,” said Melissa Fleming, the UNHCR’s chief spokeswoma­n. “We are very worried about the situation there.”

In the last year, more than a million migrants have entered Greece from Turkey, most of them from violencera­cked countries such as Syria, Afghanista­n and Iraq. From Greece, they have followed a well- worn migrant path through the Balkans into Northern Europe, with most hoping to settle in Germany, Sweden or other countries that have been relatively welcoming.

In recent months, that welcome has become strained, especially after major terrorist attacks in Paris and Brussels and attacks on women in Germany.

Under the deal, EU member states will resettle one Syrian refugee for every Syrian returned to Turkey. Chartered buses are scheduled to shuttle the migrants targeted for return to the ancient port city of Mytilene on Lesbos.

Reception and processing centers on that island are stretched beyond capacity. One center, the overwhelme­d Moria refugee camp, is about 1,000 people beyond its official capacity, observers said.

“We have observed quite a large number of people sleeping in the open,” said Cheshirkov, reached by telephone on Lesbos. “There are additional shortages of food.”

Last year’s migration increase has seen about a million people f leeing war, poverty and persecutio­n in their homelands undertake risky smuggling trips from Turkish shores.

From Mytilene, European police will accompany migrants on three daily sailings to the Turkish town of Dikili in Izmir province. The f irst boat was expected to depart at 10 a. m. Monday. Observers, however, suspect that departures may be delayed until later in the week.

Turkish authoritie­s will then register migrants and provide medical checkups to the returnees at a processing camp before resettling them in Turkish refugee camps.

The plan has drawn wide- spread criticism from human rights watchdogs.

On Friday, Amnesty Internatio­nal alleged that Turkey had been returning Syrian refugees to their warracked homeland in violation of the “non- refoulemen­t” principle of internatio­nal law.

“In their desperatio­n to seal their borders, EU leaders have willfully ignored the simplest of facts: Turkey is not a safe country for Syrian refugees and is getting less safe by the day,” said John Dalhuisen, Amnesty Internatio­nal’s director for Europe and Central Asia, in a news release.

Others worry that the necessary time has not been taken to ensure that the rights of migrants and refugees — mothers, unaccompan­ied minors, the elderly and the infirm — will be upheld.

“We are not opposed to the returns as long as human rights are upheld,” Cheshirkov said. “However, the required safeguards, which take time to implement, do not appear to be in place.”

Greek officials have defended the deportatio­ns for the coming week, saying that they are enforcing a broader EU agreement.

“These are people who have not applied for asylum or want to get asylum,” said Greece’s migration spokesman, Giorgos Kyritsis, in a statement broadcast on Alpha TV. “This is not a voluntary process, but a compulsory one.”

Other migrants and refugees — having previously undertaken risky smuggling trips aboard f limsy boats from Izmir in Turkey — wait anxiously on the Greek mainland, their hopes of making it to Western Europe increasing­ly in peril.

“We are totally against these deportatio­ns, which violate internatio­nal law,” said Cem Terzi, a neurosurge­on who heads a Turkish nongovernm­ental organizati­on, a Bridge Between Peoples, which has been providing free medical care to refugees and migrants in Izmir. “They have taken huge risks to start new lives. Now the EU is killing these people’s dreams.”

Implementa­tion of the deal has proved fraught with logistical difficulti­es.

Thousands of interprete­rs and asylum experts have f lown to Greece to process the new arrivals and determine whether they should be sent back to Turkey.

Frontex issued an urgent call on March 23 to European states for additional police to assist the deportatio­n process. By March 18, EU member states are believed to have offered only 396 police officers of the 1,500 requested by the border agency.

 ?? Louisa Gouliamaki
AFP/ Getty I mages ?? A SYRIAN WOMAN and her child at the main port on the Greek island of Chios, where protesters gathered. The plan to send migrants from Greece to Turkey has drawn criticism from human rights groups.
Louisa Gouliamaki AFP/ Getty I mages A SYRIAN WOMAN and her child at the main port on the Greek island of Chios, where protesters gathered. The plan to send migrants from Greece to Turkey has drawn criticism from human rights groups.

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