USA TODAY International Edition

Greece starts to clear makeshift refugee camp

Riot police converge on Idomeni camp at Macedonian border

- Valerie Plesch

More than 400 police deployed to relocate thousands of migrants.

IDOMENI, GREECE Greece began clearing its Idomeni refugee camp on the Macedonian border Tuesday, sealing the area and deploying more than 400 riot police to relocate thousands of refugees.

Officials said they would refrain from using force in the operation.

Giorgos Kyritsis, a spokesman for the Greek government’s refugee crisis committee, told the Athens News Agency that all the refugees would be moved to “industrial premises” around Greece.

“We believe that it will take up to 10 days to transfer the refugees from Idomeni and in the meantime more places will have been found,” Kyritsis said.

He added that current facilities can accommodat­e between 6,500 and 7,000 refugees. Authoritie­s said many would be transferre­d to industrial buildings acquired by the government near Thessaloni­ki, Greece’s second- largest city.

The makeshift camp, which housed as many as 14,000 people earlier this year, is now home to 8,200 refugees. It turned into a site offering squalid living conditions after Macedonia formally sealed its border with Greece in early March.

Still, the refugees do not want to go.

Zainab Panahi, 20, of Mazar- iSharif in northern Afghanista­n, has been camping out in Idomeni with her husband since February. Despite growing tired of daily life there and deteriorat­ing conditions, including fighting among refugees and clashes with the Greek and Macedonian police, she refuses to leave.

“I’d like to stay in Idomeni until the border opens,” she said. “I don’t want to go to ( government) camps — people there say you cannot go out. I have hope of moving forward, not staying in Greece.” Macedonia has not announced if it will reopen the border to refugees.

The evacuation is set against the backdrop of a controvers­ial deal made two months ago between the European Union and Turkey that includes the deportatio­n to Turkey of refugees who arrived in Greece after March 20.

The Idomeni camp was originally intended to temporaril­y accommodat­e no more than 2,000 refugees.

Tensions have been mounting in Idomeni for months.

Protests organized by refugees have taken place on railroad tracks in the area, and clashes between the protesters and Greek and Macedonian police are a common occurrence.

As the border remains shut, the sprawling camp has become a makeshift city complete with barbers, food stands and medical tents.

Laundry hangs on the barbed wire separating Greece and Macedonia while women sweep the fronts of their tents with makeshift brooms made out of tree branches, ferns and plastic bags. Some refugees have placed rugs outside their tent entrances. Others have spray- painted the names of Syrian cities on nearby walls.

Ahmed Kasem, from Hama in western Syria, has been living in a cement barn that customs officers once used to inspect livestock crossing the border. He shares the dark room that still smells of manure with other single Syrian male refugees.

“I don’t know what I am doing,” said Kasem, 30. “We are just waiting for the border to open.”

On the other side of the camp, dozens of families have set up temporary living quarters in and around a large, abandoned turquoise house.

“Before the war, we had a beautiful home. I had friends, I had high school. Such a beautiful life,” said Rasha Maki, 19, from Damascus.

On her phone, she keeps photos of her former apartment building, which lay in ruins.

The Maki family doesn’t want to leave the camp even as they have grown pessimisti­c of their chances to move west.

“We ( initially) thought we would stay here for four or five days,” said Maki as her father, Fahed, prepared a huge pot of spaghetti with tomato sauce over the open fire. The family has been there for three months.

“We do not know what we will do,” she said. “We don’t want to go to the other camp, we want to get out of Greece.”

“I don’t want to go to ( govern– ment) camps — people there say you cannot go out.” Zainab Panahi, 20, Afghan refugee

 ?? PHOTOS BY YANNIS KOLESIDIS, AFP/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Police escort migrants, above, during an evacuation that began Tuesday of a makeshift camp at the Greek- Macedonian border near the village of Idomeni. At left, a boy sits on a bus while he waits to be transferre­d to a reception center.
PHOTOS BY YANNIS KOLESIDIS, AFP/ GETTY IMAGES Police escort migrants, above, during an evacuation that began Tuesday of a makeshift camp at the Greek- Macedonian border near the village of Idomeni. At left, a boy sits on a bus while he waits to be transferre­d to a reception center.

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