A crackdown has started on volunteers helping refugees in Greece, with arrests on the islands of Lesvos and Chios. Today volunteers on Chios were arrested directly by Frontex, the EU border force. On Lesvos a group of two Danish volunteers (from a Muslim background) and three Spanish lifeguards were arrested for towing in a stranded dinghy with 51 refugees. They have apparently been charged with people trafficking which can carry a sentence of up to three years. This follows moves to force volunteers and NGOs to register with police, and an agreement between authorities on Lesvos and the International Rescue Committee that effectively gives the IRC control over aid efforts in the north of the island. The IRC is a US based NGO for refugees which gets much of its funding from the US government and, at least in the past, had a reputation as a CIA front organisation. Henry Kissinger and Madeline Albright are IRC 'overseers', David Milliband is CEO. I'm not actually sure what to make of its involvement, or where the repression of volunteers and workers for smaller NGOs is leading. I'm starting the thread to post news as the situation develops.
Quote: Five members of
source, more here
photos, also here
Activist on Chios reportedly charged with spying for photographing Dutch Frontex boat - source
One Spanish and two Swiss volunteers arrested by Frontex in a separate incident on Chios - source
Seven arrested on Lesvos for taking life vests from island dump - source
Video blogs from Eric Kempson
Video blogs from Eric Kempson on the role of the IRC on Lesvos
https://m.youtube.com/watch?feature=youtu.be&v=p1zcLSTgL2I
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=X5ZxNtf-tiU&feature=youtu.be
https://m.youtube.com/watch?feature=youtu.be&v=Upp19NwkLEQ
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=egxQ3gSSjbw&feature=youtu.be
Some historical background on the IRC here
IRC Board of Directors and Overseers with some interesting names
David Miliband and the IRC
Encyclopedia of Human Rights on the IRC
AFP report on the
AFP report on the arrests
Going off this Twitter thread (in Spanish) the report is clearly inaccurate and gets their nationalities and the NGO they are working with wrong.
I don't have anything to add,
I don't have anything to add, but thanks for bringing this up!
Thanks. As I said above I'm
Thanks. As I said above I'm not sure where this is leading, or quite where the IRC takeover in the north of Lesvos fits in. I think it's connected though. There are also proposals for Frontex boats to return refugees directly from Lesvos to Turkey. This would presumably apply, at least for the moment, to the refugees/migrants who don't come from Syria, Iraq or Afghanistan and are currently not being allowed through the Macedonian border at Idomeni. In theory they should still be able to claim asylum in Greece but I doubt that that counts for much in practice. All this is happening under a Syriza government of course.
Yesterday on
Yesterday on Lesvos
source
Six activists arrested on Chios yesterday - source
The Greek police on their new
The Greek police on their new approach to volunteers
Report on the arrests in
Report on the arrests in Greek
Guardian article from last
Guardian article from last week giving the spin from the Mayor of Lesvos and the UNHCR in favour of registration and control of volunteers and smaller NGOs. It also quotes praise for the IRC. This is all glossing over the conflicts between volunteers on one side and the island authorities, together with a couple of large NGOs and the UNHCR, on the other.
From the comments:
Declaration from the
Declaration from the volunteers arrested on Chios
Report on the three Spanish
Report on the three Spanish lifeguards arrested on Lesvos (in Spanish)
Also this statement
PROEMAID on Twitter: https://mobile.twitter.com/proemaid
Report on this in Greek
Quote: Activist on Chios
Report on this in Spanish - the activist is a Spanish citizen living in Holland.
https://www.facebook.com/yian
https://www.facebook.com/yiannisbaboulias/posts/10207726570338360
Yiannis Baboulias
Edit: video on the Amygdaleza detention camp
The latest on the Spanish
The latest on the Spanish lifeguards
Demo in Seville tomorrow
Greek coast guards arrest Spanish, Danish volunteers
.
https://www.facebook.com/solidarityplatanos/posts/1105502386156827
Thanks for these updates
Thanks for these updates Mark. Pretty disgusting stuff, but what else to expect...
Thanks. I think as much as
Thanks. I think as much as anything I'm trying to get a picture myself of how the changing approach to refugees in Greece fits together, along with the role of NGOs, Frontex, the Syriza government, local interests on the islands etc. The big stories are really about the refugees themselves, the risks they're taking, their reasons for leaving and the way they're treated. This can overshadow the issues around aid, NGOs, volunteers and the politics around immigration. Hence a thread on this rather than the refugees themselves.
An old post from No Border
An old post from No Border Serbia with some thoughts on the role of the big NGOs
The IOM - the International Organization for Migration - may be a case in point
Medical tent at Moria camp
Medical tent at Moria camp closed, another volunteer arrested
Twitter thread in Greek about the IRC on Lesvos
Court hearing in Mytilene now for PROEMAID and Team Humanity volunteers
Facebook thread on the arrests (see the comments)
Heroes Held Hostage: Arrest
Heroes Held Hostage: Arrest of Volunteer Refugee Rescue Team
A Syriza MP has given
A Syriza MP has given evidence in support of the volunteers - source
Also here
Edit: Two Greek MPs make public apology for the arrests
It does leave the question of where the decisions are coming from and who authorised the crackdown. I wouldn't necessarily assume that the Syriza government is the same thing as the Greek state.
Report from Rojo y Negro (in
Report from Rojo y Negro (in Spanish)
Photos from Seville
Photos from Mytilene
Photos from Mytilene
Photos from Mytilene
Video clip from Seville
Video clip from Mytilene
Report on the refugees from
Report on the refugees from the Turkish side, across from Lesvos
Written question from
Written question from Izquierda Unida MEPs to European Commission
In Spanish obviously
Report from El País (in
Report from El País (in English)
Danish press report (in English)
Quote: All 5 arrested
source
Video clip leaving court
Video clip leaving court
AJE report Quote: Police
AJE report
Report from El
Report from El País
The Spanish activist accused of spying on Chios was sentenced to six months but released on condition he doesn't return to Greece for three years.
PROEMAID
PROEMAID statement
(I can't see that 'released without charges' is correct here, if the case is still being investigated)
.
Team Humanity statement
Report from a volunteer on
Report from a volunteer on Lesvos, written yesterday before the hearing.
source
At Idomeni on the Macedonian
At Idomeni on the Macedonian border yesterday
source
Updates from Idomeni
Quote: No solo los pequeños
Rough translation - The small groups of volunteers don't just bother the authorities but also the big NGOs that are afraid of losing part of the money that's coming in.
source
PROACTIVA, the main group of
PROACTIVA, the main group of Spanish lifeguards, are being prevented from using their boats. Lives will be lost if this carries on.
source
Local politics Lesvos style -
Local politics Lesvos style - a long video blog from Eric Kempson about right wing racist business interests opposed to refugees and volunteers. I'm not sure how far decision making on the islands reflects these kinds of very local interests and how far it reflects government diktats from Athens.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=3OEguGmaX6c
Edit: some similar views in Greek
The Greek link above is by Stratis Pallis, leftist mayor of Mytilene in the '80s. He gets a mention here:
Transformations of political divides: commerce, culture and sympathy crossing the Greek-Turkish border
Video and report in Greek with elderly residents of Molyvos who came to Lesvos as refugees themselves in 1922 talking about their own experiences and about the refugees arriving now:
«Υπήρξα και εγώ πρόσφυγας και ξέρω...»
Quote: @noborderkitchen
source
Facebook post in Greek on an
Facebook post in Greek on an encounter yesterday between Syriza MPs and volunteers on Lesvos. I may have a go at translating some of this later.
Edit: a very rough translation here - I may have misunderstood some of this but it gives the general idea.
Some background at solidarityteamplatonosblog - I think 'lesbian' here means 'from Lesvos'.
End the criminalization of
End the criminalization of solidarity to refugees NOW!
Video in Spanish on the work
Video in Spanish on the work of PROEMAID
Some background on Frontex in
Some background on Frontex in the Aegean - report from May 2014
Frontex between Greece and Turkey: at the border of denial
Update from Lesvos, 12th Jan
Update from Lesvos, 12th Jan 2016
It's snowing on Lesvos, no
It's snowing on Lesvos, no refugees arriving for the last couple of days. The consequences of lifeguards being prevented from taking boats out will become clearer when the weather calms down.
Quote: I can't believe I'm
source
More at Lesvos Refugee Updates
Quote: I would personally
Team Humanity
Quote: .... The national and
From a longer article at refugeelesbos.wordpress.com, Thom Held©2016
El País - “They treated us
El País - “They treated us like terrorists,” claims freed Spanish aid worker
Radio interview in Spanish
Radio interview in Spanish with Alicia Armesto
Lesvos is getting a lot of coverage in Spain in the wake of the arrests of Spanish volunteers. I think this interview, with a journalist who has stayed on as a volunteer, covers some of the issues better than mainstream media in English, in particular around this central point:
'Alicia Armesto, as with other volunteers we've interviewed, has denounced the absolute lack of support from governments and institutions, "there isn't any type of institutional help, everything depends on volunteers and small NGOs".'
And this is what is now coming under attack, from an alliance of the island authorities, Frontex, the Syriza government and some of the larger NGOs.
AJE - Greek anarchists
AJE - Greek anarchists organise for refugees as 'state fails'
Notara26 on twitter
It will be interesting to see
It will be interesting to see which of the larger NGOs are willing to speak out against the current direction of Greek government policy. Here's MSF.
https://mobile.twitter.com/MSF_Sea
Here's a transcript of a talk by Eric Kempson last year. Amongst other things it gives an insight into the behaviour of NGOs on Lesvos.
Children on Syrian refugee
Children on Syrian refugee route could freeze to death: U.N.
MSF
https://mobile.twitter.com/teacherdude
Quote: The Eidomeni - Skopje
video
Rough translation - 'When it's -12 and you throw refugees out of the MSF tent and send them to the gas station then for the first time we can talk of fascism.'
source
In Greek The moves against
In Greek
The moves against volunteers on Lesvos
«Στη μπάντα» εθελοντές και ΜΚΟ λόγω Frontex;
'We are all illegal' from an activist on Chios
Είμαστε όλοι παράνομοι!
Refugees were arriving on
Refugees were arriving on Lesvos again yesterday as the weather improved. It seems the Spanish lifeguards from Proactiva have been allowed to take their boats out. This follows the previous instructions to leave them moored in the harbour until further notice.
Vice News report on
Vice News report on Lesvos
The people who made 2015 a safer year for migrants to cross the Mediterranean
Irin News report which tbh
Irin News report which tbh doesn't quite get it
Is Greece right to rein in refugee volunteerism?
Two deaths from hypothermia
Two deaths from hypothermia on the crossing to Lesvos
Report on this from Team Platanos
Quote: BREAKING: We have
https://mobile.twitter.com/MSF_Sea
Spanish volunteers on Lesvos
Spanish volunteers on Lesvos reporting that they are being stopped from giving out dry clothes to refugees arriving on the beaches (in Spanish)
Quote: To whom it may
source
'Syriza is a leftist
'Syriza is a leftist political force the way Donald Trump is'
From an article on Algerians
From an article on Algerians and Moroccans locked up on Samos
.
From the same blog: Let them pass: refugees and Europe December 2015
This article gives some
This article gives some background on the situation at Idomeni and the detention and deportation of North Africans.
Restrictions and segregation on the Balkan route: Fences, detention and push-backs
The IOM is the International Organization for Migration. It seems to be a player in Greece's refugee crisis, handling deportations. Greece has also asked for Frontex to organise deportations by boat from the islands to Turkey, and the IOM may not be involved in this.
From the Macedonian META.mk
From the Macedonian META.mk news agency. I've no idea how reliable this is and Bild doesn't sound like the greatest source. If true it may help explain current policy towards volunteers. (Edit: this story is being questioned by journalists so it may not be reliable)
Germany and Austria planning to close the Macedonian border
As of yesterday the border is open but only to Syrians, Iraqis and Afghans stating that they are heading for Austria or Germany.
In Spanish This claims to
In Spanish
This claims to quote unnamed sources in Frontex but again I'm not sure about it's reliability.
Documentos de Frontex: Grecia detuvo a los españoles para "escarmentar" a las ONG
“Whatever we do, we do it
“Whatever we do, we do it together". Call for support and detailed report from No Border Kitchen on Lesvos
Report of a push-back by
Report of a push-back by masked men a week ago. It isn't clear if they were Greek or Turkish, although victims of previous attacks have stated that the attackers definitely weren't speaking Turkish.
http://watchthemed.net/reports/view/410
12 dead, at least 10 missing
12 dead, at least 10 missing from boat heading for Lesvos today
Yesterday's deaths:
[quote=Proactiva]
In the eyes of institutions and volunteers sea takes lives of new victims. It hurts.
It's more painful when you have an emergency before your eyes, experience telling you that you must act immediately, and you stumble upon the slowness and lack of coordination on the other side.
Today we have lived that closely.
In a tense waiting and after much insistence, we decided to intervene. At that moment authorities decided to take charge. But it had been too long, it was too cold. It was too late for this little child, the cold took the live of a 5-year little girl.
It is victim number 87 in 2016 .
Enough.
[/quote]
[quote=Oscar Camps]
Children dying of hypothermia due to incompetence and excessive police zeal Shame on them! [/quote]
Oscar Camps
Oscar Camps again
'Since the second arrest of Proemaid they don't let anyone act at sea unless it's for a shipwreck.'
The implication is that refugees are dying of hypothermia because of delays caused by the Greek authorities.
Dutch volunteer planning
Dutch volunteer planning court case against Frontex
At least 21 dead in two
At least 21 dead in two shipwrecks this morning (report in Greek)
[quote=Oscar Camps]
Unos 122 muertos en 21 días, mujeres y niños en su mayoría. El Egeo la fosa común de la UE @PROACTIVA_SERV @tv3cat
[/quote]
'Some 122 deaths in 21 days, the majority women and children. The Aegean is the mass grave of the EU'
Edit: At least 30 dead (in Greek)
[quote=Daphne Tolis]
UPDATE: 37 is the death toll from both shipwrecks so far: 30 from #Kalolimno shipwreck, 7 from #Farmakonisi. #refugeecrisis #Greece
[/quote]
[quote=MSF_Sea]
UPDATE:The @MSF team is providing psych care to surivors of #Kalymnos tragedy. 1 man lost his mum, wife & 4 kids-his sorrow is unimaginable.
Horror stories are emerging - 1 man lost his pregnant wife & 2 kids, a 17 y/o lost his brother an entire family was swallowed by the sea...
How many more families will be destroyed before #safepassage is a priority for #Europe?
At least 42 #people drowned today. They'd all be alive if the #Turkey #Greece land border was open.
[/quote]
Οι επισκέψεις της Frontex και
Οι επισκέψεις της Frontex και οι «χαλαρές κουβεντούλες»
Αντιρατσιστικό Παρατηρητήριο: δεν είναι «λύση» η ποινικοποίηση των εθελοντών
Διαμαρτυρία της Πρωτοβουλίας Πολιτών μπροστά από σκάφος της Frontex
In Spanish Spanish TV report
In Spanish
Spanish TV report on the work of Proemaid on Lesvos and interview with Manuel Blanco, one of the volunteers arrested last week. Warning - images of dead children. The report on Lesvos starts at 23 minutes.
El precio de la solidaridad
Wednesday's video blogs from
Wednesday's video blogs from Eric Kempson on Lesvos
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=mpaQq1XJAO4
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=LiGasztViak
In Greek
Facebook post from a Greek volunteer on Wednesday
Stop Mare Mortum condemns the
Stop Mare Mortum condemns the criminal action of Frontex, impeding rescue operations on the island of Lesvos
Last Wednesday morning a group of activists from Stop Mare Mortum — a united platform in solidarity with refugees, based in Catalonia — returned from the island of Lesvos where could see, among other things, the rescue work carried out there by volunteers. We were also able to talk to many of the associations that give urgent assistance and they explained to us that Frontex, the European border control agency, restricts its role to observing the area and only helps to rescue boats at sea when they sink. In fact, under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, it has the duty to render assistance. They also carry out functions, jointly with the Greek police, of checking people who arrive to decide who has the right to continue their journey and who doesn’t, according to their nationality.
We had just got back when we received news — and these reports were confirmed by contacts we had made on the island — that on Wednesday morning, following several days of strong storms, there was a significant arrival of boats. This time, Frontex changed its usual observer role and decided to intervene. They prevented ProActiva Open Arms — an NGO from the Catalan city of Badalona, composed of volunteer lifeguards from across Spain, which carries out rescues on the beach and in the sea — from approaching the boats that were adrift at different points north of Lesbos so as to rescue the people on them. ProActiva cite a specific case: in an emergency concerning a boat off the coast of Skala Sikamineas, they were not given permission to act and “after a long wait and many attempts [to get authorisation], we decided to start the operation. At that moment, the authorities decided to take charge. But too much time had gone by, and it was very cold.” As a result of this delay, a girl of nearly five died of hypothermia before reaching land, and a woman of 44 with hypothermia died following a heart attack.
To stabilise severe hypothermia, immediate intervention is required. The attitude of Frontex in this case is responsible for these two deaths, as it is for many others that are caused continuously along the borders of Europe. While the states of the European Union argue about what to do with refugees, while they say they are concerned to preserve values that have never really respected, their border control agency helps reduce the refugee problem in the most drastic way: causing them to die at sea. Official Europe has been turning its back on the problem, in effect, until it came knocking on their doors. Now the bartering continues, with the auctioning of human lives and the evasion of responsibilities.
This Europe, so often responsible for tragedies in other countries, with its neo-colonial and warlike foreign policy, does not represent us. For that reason, we will not tire of repeating, “For the dignity of Europe, for respect for human rights, no more deaths in the Mediterranean.”
source
Thanks for these updates
Thanks for these updates Mark, much appreciated
Thanks. Maybe putting this
Thanks. Maybe putting this information together will be of some use. There has been some good mainstream media reporting on the refugee crisis but I think the better reporting still tends to operate under ideological constraints that make it difficult to ask some basic questions, including questions about the conflicts between volunteers/activists and the authorities. I'd say these are going to become more central as borders close, the number of refugees arriving rises, and Greece heads towards a policy of prison camps and deportations. For now Syrians, Iraqis and Afghans are being allowed to travel on to Austria and Germany but it's hard to see this lasting for long, at least without some form of selection. That leaves the question of what happens to everyone else. Tsipras has been calling for Frontex organised deportations from the islands to Turkey. At the moment it's mainly North Africans being targeted for detention and deportation but I expect the net will be cast wider as time goes on. I'm not sure what this will mean for people with an obvious claim to refugee status who aren't accepted by Germany.
Vice News report Athens
Vice News report
Athens becomes a human holding pen as Europe's borders slam shut
Quote: #Eidomeni refugee
https://mobile.twitter.com/filiopk/status/690558448799473665
Αναρχική Ομοσπονδία -
Αναρχική Ομοσπονδία - Περιφέρεια Κ. Μακεδονίας : Οι μετανάστες είναι αδέρφια ταξικά
Quote: Greek police officers
source
Protests on the Evros
Protests on the Evros border
Video
Siege of fences from Evros to Calais, January 23 to 24, Alexandroupoli
Quote: Greece wants EU
source
Quote: In temperatures of
https://mobile.twitter.com/teacherdude
https://mobile.twitter.com/MSF_Sea
Yeah Mark just to echo other
Yeah Mark just to echo other people's thanks for posting these updates, very interesting and much appreciated!
Quote: Even though Greek
https://mobile.twitter.com/teacherdude
https://mobile.twitter.com/refugee_supp
Quote: Instead of being
https://mobile.twitter.com/Faloulah
https://mobile.twitter.com/AthensLiveGr
https://mobile.twitter.com/OmairaGill
I am no hero -
I am no hero - solidarityteamplatonosblog
What shall we do when the
What shall we do when the borders close?
Benjamin Julian wrote:
We have been cooking soup, distributing blankets, giving information, warmth, food and hope. It has been fun, it has been tragic. We’ve tried to bring a human face to the Balkan route. It has been intense, rewarding, invaluable. The support has been staggering, seeing the solidarity has been beautiful. But I am afraid we are on the wrong track. While we are providing aid and saving lives on the ground, politicians up high in the glass towers of Brussels have been hard at work getting over their differences in order to contain, regulate, close up and slow down the arrival of foreigners in Europe. They are doing it by means of savage bureaucracy, with the tidal waves of history propelling them forward, coming down on support movements as well as visitors to our continent, breaking up solidarity, isolating refugees from us and society. Migrants are step by step being put away in camps and prisons, contained like a disease, to protect Europe from exposure. This is the brutal face of bureaucracy and order, regulation and isolation, which tolerates no independent assistance, no independent information, no independent contact.
The shock of a million foreigners has set European racists reeling. It has made bureaucratic machines crack and sputter. The micromanaging states of Europe want this disaster of irregularity, chaos and non-registration to end. Better a drowned refugee than a non-registered one. Better an imprisoned child than a smuggled one. Keep THEM in those white boxes and keep those white boxes in barbed-wire fences and have volunteers – registered, of course – keep refugees in line. Sort them by nationality, gender, age, vulnerability, take their fingerprints and check just HOW MUCH they suffered, because we don’t accept just anyone here, you know. Write their number on their hand, tag their fingernails, count the cups of soup they get, stamp their papers, give them thirty days to get to Level 2 or it’s Game Over. Then their journey begins again, and when they get here next time, the open camp will be a detention center, the food-distributor a prison guard, the registration will be for a flight back home. And where will we, the soup-cookers and clothes-distributors, be then?
The incompetence of Greece and Europe has made people believe this can’t happen. But this is an illusory hope. Sure, Greece is incapable of managing registration, let alone keeping a million people detained. But Big Brother Europe has plenty of force to spare. Frontex-officials are coming to the islands like a plague of black locusts, gnawing apart nonconforming support structures, ridding the Balkan route of the insufficient Greek Coast Guard and insubordinate volunteers. In due time, tent camps will have disappeared and there’ll be a clean, white wall with a roll of barbed wire on top for us to graffiti edgy slogans on. Wet and fearful people will be brought in, and they will be “processed”, and when they will come out a magical transformation will have happened. They will either have the luck of having become a Second Class Temporary European, ready for deportation as soon as Their Disaster is over, or be an Economic Migrant, a worthless rightless leech on our goodwill, a disgusting rapist opportunist Muslim that can’t be deported too early. And where will we, the blanket-distributors and soup-givers, be then?
The weather is cold and windy, and still the boats bring thousands of people every day. What will it be like this summer? We are not the only ones wondering. The showrunners of Europe say they have two months to “save Schengen”, to hold together a thirty year old project, which is now crumbling under the weight of a million undocumented people – 0.2% of Europe’s population. More refugees are residing in Lebanon, a country of four million! If this is what refugees have brought us so far, what next? The infinitely rigid structure of European law, order and bureaucracy, carefully and painstakingly built on top of five hundred years of colonialism, slavery and oppression, is completely and utterly freaking out over this miniscule disturbance in the continent’s demographics. Europeans have built their collection of states like a kid builds a house out of toothpicks – on the assumption that nobody comes in and disturbs it. Now the smallest gust of air is making it collapse. “We cannot cope with the numbers any longer”, the Dutch prime minister says. Just imagine what he’ll be saying in June, when the Aegean sea will be warm and still.
We have to prepare for this. Europe is freaking out already, and it has given itself two months to save itself from the refugees. Only its boundless incompetence and disunity have allowed migrants to travel for this long. But with a near-fascist government in Poland, a straight-out racist ruling Hungary (with an even worse opposition), and the whole of Central Europe just waiting for an excuse to shut their borders, we can’t rely on hope or prayer anymore. Even the Empress of Europe, Angela Merkel, tried and failed to open the doors to refugees. She was sailing against the storms of five centuries, against the waves of populism, xenophobia and terror that rule the states around her, and even her own party.
We have to be prepared for Europe to try, haphazardly and fumbling, but with the determination of a mad drunkard, to lock up refugees and stop their coming here. Europe’s two ventricles of racist society and control-freak bureaucracy reinforce each other, pumping their insidious ideology across the continent. It spews forth in the utterances of everyday people: “There’s no space for them here”, “they don’t fit in”, “they’re all rapists”, “open borders just wouldn’t work”, “there has to be some order to this”, “they’re after our jobs”, “if we save them, more will come”. Europe has built itself assuming it was safe from foreigners. Now it’s in existential crisis. And as a rat stuck in a corner, it will rip apart anything and everything to save itself. It won’t spare any right, it will break any refugee, that stands in its way.
We have to be prepared for this. The state has benefitted from our providing wet arrivals with dry clothes, giving hungry camp-dwellers food, distributing blankets to freezing people sleeping under the starry sky. But now we are in the way. We are giving people a reason to care. We are building relations with those who are not supposed to be here. We are fighting for them, sometimes one person at a time, to make it through the next border. Now we are the targets.
We have to unite, communicate, know our strengths and attack the racism, exclusion and separation that the state is imposing on us. Europe is giving itself two months to save itself. What will we do?
Refugees unwelcome: border
Refugees unwelcome: border closures and freezing temperatures
Greece threatened with expulsion from Schengen over migration crisis
Greece rejects Schengen threats as 'blame game'
https://mobile.twitter.com/YiannisBab
Quote: The Belgian
source
Chios: 'Pretexts for controls
Chios: 'Pretexts for controls on those in solidarity, highly paid NGOs and repression'
Προσχηματικοί έλεγχοι στους αλληλέγγυους, ακριβοπληρωμένες ΜΚΟ και καταστολή
Lesvos this morning - Eric
Lesvos this morning - Eric Kempson's video blogs. The IRC putting refugees at risk from hypothermia.
https://youtu.be/BOlL3mrSYoE
https://youtu.be/tWiIbZ_j4Ko
The IRC on its reception centre on Lesvos, funded in part through UK AID, that is by the British government.
IRC video on Lesvos
IRC president David Miliband at Davos: 'it’s right for the integrity of the system that those who don’t meet the criteria to qualify as refugees are not allowed to stay.'
Idomeni - Greek police
Idomeni - Greek police demanding money from refugees
Quote: Over 1,000,000
source
EU exerts pressure on Greece
EU exerts pressure on Greece via Schengen threat
https://mobile.twitter.com/IdafeMartin
Quote: One woman reached
source
Amnesty on the situation at
Amnesty on the situation at Idomeni
Spanish lifeguards on Lesvos
Spanish lifeguards on Lesvos are being prevented from using their boats.
https://mobile.twitter.com/proemaid/status/691972245460275200
Report in Greek about
Report in Greek about detainees, mainly Moroccans, being beaten by prison guards to get them to sign up for 'voluntary' repatriation.
Ενημέρωση από Μεταγωγών
Edit - translation:
Assaults against migrant prisoners in Thessaloniki removal center
Quote: Greek MigrationMin
source
European Commission press
European Commission press release
Commission discusses draft Schengen Evaluation Report on Greece
[quote=Zoe Mavroudi]
EU strategy, same as on fin crisis: pass buck to Greece about a pan-European problem, talk about "common interests".
When the @EU_Commission talks of "border control" think drowned children, families sleeping in the cold, millions spent on security contracts
The @EU_Commission commemorates Holocaust Memorial Day with press release basically telling #Greece it must guard its borders from refugees.
[/quote]
[quote=Damomac]
Let's remember the victims on #HolocaustMemorialDay and reflect on the fact that restrictive #refugee policy sealed the fate of many Jews.
[/quote]
End Detention Facebook page
End Detention Facebook page
A year of disappointment in
A year of disappointment in Greece
Yiannis Baboulias
MSF Sea wrote: UPDATE: The
[quote=MSF Sea]
UPDATE: The #Greece #FYROM border & the #FYROM #Serbia border are "temporarily" closed. For how long? nobody knows.
[/quote]
[quote=Andrew Connelly]
#Idomeni border opened midday, let in ~150. Closed since. Deep sense of foreboding as clock ticks until Europe finally raises the drawbridge
[/quote]
No one answered their
No one answered their desperate calls for help. Survivors tell about severe breaches of international law in Turkey.
11.45 PM, January 4, 2016 another boat sinks on its way to the Greek island Lesvos. After 12 hours in a freezing cold January sea, Ahmad staggers to land on the shore of Altinova, Turkey. As soon as his wounded feet reach dry land, he collapses. A local medical staff wraps him in a blanket.
This is the first help that he or any of the 52 people on the boat that would take them to Mytilini on Lesvos receive. Despite panicked screams for help and desperate phone calls to all authorities and contacts they know of.
They even met a boat out there in their peril, drifting towards death.
But no one came. Not on Greek water and not on Turkish water. The boat they met turned and left them.
Next to Ahmad on the shore, which in the summertime is crowded with affluent tourists, the other passengers washed ashore as the sun rises in they sky. Children, babies, mothers and fathers, ever petrified with fear. A little girl, who Ahmad held until she could not fight any longer, is lying there in her pink jacket.
The only survivors from the boat on January 4 are 12 men who travelled alone or with a friend or relative.
When Ahmad is taken in the ambulance he believes he is saved, in safety.
But he is wrong. This frightful story is far from over for him or the other survivors. It is still ongoing, somewhere in Turkey.
It is the first Monday of January and Ahmad is finally taking the way across the sea to Greece, to the EU. He is an open critic of the regime and has worked with art in Syria and Jordan. He has no other choice than to flee to Europe. He does not know where yet. He has bought a ticket for a day trip on a boat from a smuggler that seems to be good on Basmane Square in Izmir. This is where all the “traveling agencies” are. He is soon shown to a taxi and a convoy of cars drives them for hours. They are let off in a grove of olive trees somewhere. And immediately everything changes.
– We were met by a gang of smugglers, it was the mafia. They screamed, cursed and threatened us all, says Ahmad.
He says that the smugglers are armed with firearms and iron tools and knives as large as swords.
– They threatened and beat us all, not even the children got away. We didn’t want to, but they forced us into a boat even though it was dark, cold and the sea was rough.
The 52 people plus a driver got into the boat and drove out in the dark unknown sea. Everyone was afraid and after just ten minutes everyone onboard demanded the driver to turn around. He did as he was told.
– But when we came back to the place we left from the boss of the smugglers was still there. He became furious and started to hit the driver with his knife. He put a weapon against his head. Everyone in the boat screamed at him to stop, but then he threatened to do the same to anyone who screamed. He sent us back out again.
“If you come back I will kill you!”. The smuggler boss remained on the beach and in the boat Ahmad and the others began to understand their fate. They had no other option than to go straight out into the rough sea and the increasing rain. It was only a few degrees above freezing. In the little rubber boat which is really only meant for a few people, the children sit at the bottom. The passengers begin to become acquainted, introduce themselves and find out what skills they have.
– To dispel fear, says Ahmad.
And “just in case”. But they are all intent on reaching the other side, to the blinking red lights at the airport of Lesvos. They see no other choice. But when the rain and the frightening waves cause more and more panic onboard they decide to call the coast guard and hope to be saved that way. A ticket is about 1 000 Euro per person.
Even if it means becoming caught in Turkey. They do not dare return to the beach again.
The Turkish coast guard answers that they can be calm. They will come.
But when 30 minutes have passed since they called the coast guard no one has come to their rescue. The engine begins to malfunction. It breaks down and starts working again. Back and forth.
The boat crosses the border and they are on Greek water. They call the coast guard for help. They send an SOS in their Whatsapp group that they use to communicate during the journey. They write to other forums on Facebook and call family and friends for help.
Suddenly they see a ship closer to Greece and head towards it. The engine shuts down but they drift in the right direction. They even see the Greek shore, their goal. They are scared, but still see the light and hope in the blinking lamps along the coastline of Lesvos.
– We came all the way to the ship. Finally we are saved, we thought. We banged on the hull of the boat and together lifted the children in the air so that they would see them. Just take the children! we called. But no one came.
They call for help and see the captain come out. He shines a torch on them, smokes a cigarette. When he is done he throws the butt on Ahmad and the others in the boat and goes into the cabin and starts the ship’s engine.
They continue to call for help with the coast guard but they have stopped responding.
It is 11.45 PM. They know this for certain because one of the survivors’ watches has stopped at that time. 11.45 PM is also the time of the last emergency call from the boat. It is Ayman, a young Syrian who calls his brother and asks him to take care of his children now that he is dying at sea.
– The sea started to boil beneath us. The swell of the ship’s engine filled the boat with water. It was indescribable, I will never forget it. Those who sat at the boats bottom drowned first, and that was the children.
Eventually the boat breaks in two and everyone falls off. Or down. Ahmad has a six-year-old girl on his arm. Her mother despairs, the girl’s two brothers have already drowned at sea, they are gone. “Please, help my daughter!” are the mother’s last panic-stricken words before she too disappears.
– “Mister, hold me up!” the girl called and held onto my neck. I lifted her as high as I could. But the waves were high. She kept asking when the coast guard would come and save us. I told her “We live together or we die together, I will not leave you”, says Ahmad.
He and the girl are alone on the drift of the waves. The wind blows towards Turkey. For a while Ahmad finds some drifting wood to hold on to. But a wave takes it. The waves hit the girl, her face.
– I saw that she was starting to drown, but I couldn’t do anything even though I had promised her. Does that make me her killer? She died in my arms … I put her with the life jacket on her back, and said “Rest in peace. It will be good now, there is nothing left in life for you. Your brothers died, your mother died. Rest in peace”.
Ahmad is almost paralyzed from shock, cold and exhaustion. But he is swimming for his life. Night is turning into day. Suddenly he is closing in on twelve people from the boat. They are alive and one of them reach out with a hand. They have held on to the wreck of the boat. Dead people hang from it. Together they drift towards the Turkish coast. They reach a cliff. It is slippery and sharp and the waves make the attempts to get up violent. One woman hits her head and dies.
– It was so cold. We tried to become warm with stones and by holding each other. People started to come out by the beach and we called and waved, but no one saw us. That was when I decided to swim the last distance.
After nearly twelve hours of struggle for his and his travel companions’ lives, Ahmad swims the last 2 kilometers to land. He staggers up on the shore and is transported by ambulance to the hospital. He thinks he is safe.
But he is not. And neither are the others from the boat.
The other eleven men from the boat are picked up from the cliff by a smaller coast guard boat. They are wet, cold and in shock. But instead of being taken to land, to a hospital, they have to go with the boat and pick up dead bodies from the sea. For over an hour they go and pick up bodies instead of receiving medical attention.
Ahmad is at the hospital for a couple of hours. He rambles and feels guilt because he could not rescue the six-year-old girl. He and the eleven surviving men are taken to Altinova Jandarma, a military police station. They are held captive and are interrogated. None of them know why they are not released.
– I asked them every day, when will we get out? Why are you doing this? But there was no answer. During the first three days some organisation came with clothes and crackers, but after that no one was let in to see us. When someone was there the police pretended that everything was alright, but when they left they changed completely, says Ahmad.
Turkish and some international press have reported that one or two boats were wrecked on the night between January 4 and 5. But when the news is out any outside attention disappears. None of the survivors on the military police station get help to reach their relatives. How they are treated is closest described as torture.
– We were forced to look at the dead people from the boat. Not pictures, but the actual bodies. They took us in one by one and wanted us to identify them. I was beside myself and couldn’t understand why or how they could do this to us.
Ahmad panics and starts to shake inside the Jandarma. But the treatment continues.
–We were forced to work for food. We shoveled coal from the backyard. If we didn’t do what they said they gave us no food and hit us with sticks.
Some of the survivors decide to go on a food strike, but none of the police take them seriously. “Suit yourselves”.
After 15 days in captivity, without knowing why they were arrested or how long they were to stay, the twelve survivors from a boat of 52 were released. At the time 29 bodies have been found. The youngest wore a water-filled diaper. The picture of the girl that Ahmed tried to save, in her pink jacket and blue jeans, has circulated online. On the picture her black hair on the beach resembles a macabre gloria. A six-year-old girl on her way to the EU with her mother and two brothers to be able to live. The only way there left them at the mercy of an illegal and dangerous business run by a smuggler mafia associated with the Turkish authorities.
They never reached the EU tonight. The EU, which has given Turkey three billion to deal with the situation such as the one with the utterly insecure flight route over the Aegean Sea. The route that families and young men take every night, every day of the year. 30–40 boats still leave desolate beaches in Turkey every day. Many arrive and a new long journey towards asylum and residence permit is begun. But far too many never reach the shores and the shiny emergency blankets, soap bubbles and the warming tea of the voluntary workers. During 2016 there are already 158 deaths on the Mediterranean. 158 when this is written. 158 that we know of. Because who keeps track of the boats that are forced to go illegally protected by darkness and difficult weather? Who writes a passenger list on an illegal journey controlled by the mafia in the worst kept secret in the country? No, no one.
Why didn’t the Turkish coast guard show up as they promised?
Their office is in the harbor of Dikili. It was around this little Turkish coastal town that the dead and the survivors came on the morning of January 5. The coastguards cannot say what happened. But they were out that night, helping another boat. They show us their film footage.
Either they were tired of SOS calls from boats with engine trouble. Or there was an economic agreement with the team of smugglers on land not to pick them up. Or Ahmad’s boat was confused with the other one, the boat that had similar difficulties that same night. The coast guard was there and saved people. But no one knows how many boats leave the Turkish coast. “And God knows how many bodies are out there” says one of the officials at the Dikili coastguard after Ahmed’s boat has sunk. No one knows.
Ahmad and the eleven other men were released, and put on a bus to Izmir. Together with two of the other men he has travelled to another location and wants to find a new way to reach safety in the EU. It is from here that he tells his part of the story. At this time, he and his new friends from the boat are just as scared of the smugglers as they are of the military police, the jandarma.
– Why does the world let us who try to reach safety die? Why does no one see what is happening and open the way for us who need to live in Europe. This way just becomes an illegal business where people forge papers and manage to get in, while children are left to drown.
Like Ahmad and the other 52 people on the boat at 11.45 PM, January 4, 2016. On a cold, rainy and stormy sea, with no attempts to help from the responsible authorities. Left to their own devices. All while the EU promises billions to Turkey.
This story is translated from swedish webbpublication KIT and is written by Annah Björk and researched by Mattias Beijmo. Thanks for the translation LH Bergstrom.
Greek migration minister
Greek migration minister Yiannis Mouzalas claims Belgian interior minister called for push backs at sea saying 'I'm afraid I don't care if you drown them'
Report on Greek push backs
Report on Greek push backs from 2013
Mouzalas speaking at Syriza
Mouzalas speaking at Syriza meeting in Thessaloniki yesterday, confronted by protests against the Evros fence and the treatment of migrants and volunteers.
Εκδήλωση του ΣΥΡΙΖΑ Θεσ/νίκης,παρέμβαση διαδηλωτών και εντάσεις
Samos today Quote: As I
Samos today
source
Moria: when UN camp failed,
Moria: when UN camp failed, volunteers built their own
In German Quote: #volunteer
In German
source
From the Samos Refugees
From the Samos Refugees Facebook page, posted at the start of January so the situation could have changed.
Samos Refugees / Πρόσφυγες στη Σαμο
Food for Thought
The authorities on the island have a duty to ensure that the refugees are fed. It is one of their core responsibilities. On Samos the authorities have left it to the volunteers and NGOs to fulfill this task. At the same time they have made this task more difficult and inhumane by insisting that no food provision can be made inside the camp.
With the freezing weather the issue of feeding all the refugees on Samos becomes ever more important. It is critical to their welfare that they are able to eat good nutritious food. It is ridiculous to make this point as it is so self-evidently obvious. Furthermore it serves no one if refugees are hungry.
The food security of the refugees, especially for the hundreds in the now 'open' detention centre has improved in recent weeks. MSF (Doctors without Borders) now provides a meal at lunch time, volunteer groups provide weekend breakfasts on a regular basis, and more recently a group of activists have created a kitchen and provide a hot meal in the evening. Likewise at the Port where the Syrian refugees wait to be processed an array of NGOs and volunteers provide meals.
But why do the police at the Detention Centre demand that all food like the clothes that volunteer groups bring must be distributed outside the fences and gates of the Centre? Such an insistence routinely humiliates the refugees who have to form lines on the road outside by the garbage bins. It is not uncommon for there to be scuffles and panic as people push to get their food or some clothes. Part of this problem stems from the complete exclusion of the refugees from all aspects of their welfare. The processes they experience whilst on Samos demands passivity and patience. And this is felt even more sharply in places such as the detention centre where there are so many things that could be done to lift the dismal conditions. So many of the refugees suffer from this forced idleness and are enthusiastic when there is a chance to do something. But this is not in the minds of the authorities. Instead the refugees are excluded and left in the dark. This is one of the factors that can spark chaos simply because none of the refugees knows what is going on and is desperate not to be excluded.
Moving all food and aid distribution into the Centre itself would do nothing more than make a slight improvement in the conditions for the refugees. But at least it would allow for the possibilities of more organised, effective and above all respectful distribution to be implemented. In the old camp for example, we have heard of how each dormitory would nominate a representative who would order and fetch the food for all the room. This avoided the 'cattle-feeding' scenes that you can sometimes see at the Centre when people have to form long queues. Such a system would not be difficult to implement in the Centre.
It seems unlikely that current policy will change. In large measure this is one of the direct consequences of having the Greek police as the lead agency in the management and welfare of refugees. As we have noted over many years, the mandate of the police has been clearly defined entirely within a criminal 'justice' and penal policy approach. Hence refugees are arrested and incarcerated in Detention Centres which run according to prison guidelines. Or at least that it is the intention. Moreover the police starved of resources have been pressed to focus all their attention and resources on processing the new arrivals, and in the case of Samos, moving them on to Athens at the earliest opportunity. Even if there was a desire to do something about refugee welfare and meeting the basic needs of the refugees, the police simply lack the resources to do very much. But the crunch problem is the focus and defining the refugee exodus primarily as an issue of control and counter terrorism and not as a humanitarian catastrophe. Until that fundamental shift occurs then the Greek Police will remain as the lead agency in places such as the Centre. In these circumstances it is hard to be optimistic that conditions for refugees will fundamentally improve.
Nevertheless, the necessity to feed the refugees in the Centre means that the principal food providers have some power in this matter. Maybe the Police could be made to consider alternatives if the main providers made it a condition of their intervention that all food should, wherever possible, be cooked and distributed in the Centre? But it is not clear if this power will be exercised. The Greek state demands total compliance with its decisions and policies as a condition of an NGO's entry to Greece and hence Samos. Many of them, including MSF feel that they have no alternative but to comply if they are to be allowed in and even require their workers to sign contracts which forbids them from challenging any Greek authority or decision. This is part of the price they pay to come to Samos to help the refugees. Step out of line and you are out and in the past 3 months we have seen some seasoned and senior NGO personnel rapidly removed from Samos following 'confrontations' with the police or the authorities. Our experience to date is that most of the NGOs here are fearful to rock the boat. A cause of further pessimism.
Doing Things Better
So many times over the past year we have seen how refugees working alone or with activists do things better. It is the refugees who best identify those amongst them who need special attention. It has been the refugees who have shown us how to provide meals for hundreds without any chaos and with humour and respect. We have seen so many men and women stand up and take responsibility for their group of refugees. The groups which form on the journey to Samos are often strongly glued together. They rarely move on to Athens until all of them have got their papers even when this can lead to significant delays. It is the group, through sharing, that ensures their survival and gives them a crucial sense of security and confidence. Many refugees would be stuck on Samos if their group had not managed to find their ferry fare.
These strengths and talents are not recognised and so are never used. This is not only the case for many of the state agencies, but includes many NGO's and many volunteers and their groups. Invariably it leads to refugees being seen as passive victims who are cut out of some the very few areas where they could participate and make a difference. Again an obvious example is meal preparation and provision. Recently, a group of activists have created a kitchen at the Detention Centre which provides a wonderful example of involving refugees in the provision of a hot nutritious evening meal which they prepare and cook alongside the activists. As one of the refugees slicing vegetables told us “we feel human again doing this”. Of similar importance is that it leads to meals which are attractive and appetizing to the refugees, something which can not be guaranteed with the bought in meals from local hotels over which the refugees have no input.
(Needless to say this kitchen is outside the gates with all the difficulties (no running water, no sinks etc) that involves. In past few days the Police have asked them to move. They want them away from the roadside and relocated on the hill above the camp. Why is it so important to the Police that this splendid kitchen should be out of sight?)
We are not short of similar examples which illustrate that a thought through food policy for refugees is much more than putting food on a plate. In a context where the psychological needs of often traumatised people are almost completely neglected, involving refugees in the preparing, cooking and distribution of meals, which in turn are appetising and nutritious can do much to promote their well-being.
Natasha Tsangarides - Why are
Natasha Tsangarides - Why are volunteers being treating like criminals in Greece?
Platanos Refugee Solidarity,
[quote=Platanos Refugee Solidarity, Lesvos]
Platanos, as part of its solidarity action for financially challenged families in Lesvos, distributed boxes of basic food items and large packets of legumes and pasta to nine families in the village of Lepetymnos, two days ago. While we don’t believe these people’s financial problems will be solved this way, we decided to share part of the donations we have received with them. We thank all of you who, through your donations, give us the opportunity to continue our active solidarity to the refugees and, to the extent that it’s possible, the people of Lesvos.
[/quote]
An old post from the Samos
An old post from the Samos Chronicles blog, which has some of the more perceptive writing I've seen on the crisis as viewed from the islands. Again the situation may have changed, particularly with more NGOs arriving.
Something or Nothing: Helping Refugees on Samos
There has been so little time to stop and think. Since May this year the daily arrival of refugees coming to Samos across the sea from Turkey has transformed the daily lives of many here. The scale of this flow of humanity is hard to grasp. Everything seems to change. You look differently at the sea and sky now worrying about the waves and the wind. Above all you are endlessly alert, for although you know there are going to be arrivals you never know when, where or in what circumstances. If you can, you go down to the landings. This is a very critical time for the refugees. You can’t hang around. Especially now when the weather and sea at night is much colder than during the summer months. But also because now we are seeing many more babies, young children, pregnant women, older and disabled people amongst the refugees. They are vulnerable and find the sea journey and all that it entails waiting in the forests and shores of Turkey very difficult.
The reason we think and act as we do has one very simple explanation. We are human. How is it possible to be human and do nothing? Every day we see people who have suffered and are still suffering. People who are forced to face danger in order to find safety. It is beyond wrong.
From the ‘system’ nothing has been provided for the welfare of the refugees arriving on Samos. NOTHING! The only exception has been the rescue efforts of the coastguards, Frontex and now some volunteer rescue craft from Scandinavia. For the past months they have saved many lives. But other than the police who register and process the arriving refugees we have seen nobody.
We don’t have much time for the institutions and parliaments of the powerful. They are not known for their humanity and concern for the poor, anywhere or at any time. Samos provides a classic case study. Even on impoverished Samos there are resources which could make a difference. There is the army which could so easily patrol the shores and pick up and care for the arrivals; there are empty buildings which with little work could be made into refugee shelters and so on. As one experienced aid worker told us, it is worse than working in some of the poorest countries in the world. There there was absolutely nothing whereas here on Samos we know that there are resources and facilities which could make a difference. But they refuse to allow this. Why? It is almost impossible to explain and certainly impossible to excuse.
These are acts of cruelty; not to do something that would help when you have the means to do it. A big surprise is that ‘power’ does not seem to mind being unmasked for the horror it brings to so many; it does not seem to mind that its claims to be built on principles and values such as freedom of movement, solidarity, peace, prosperity and human dignity are stripped bare and revealed as empty words. It makes you think!
From our observations, whenever the agents of the system have to inter-act with the refugees directly it is more often than not dehumanising. There is often a lot of shouting (usually in English and /or Greek which means nothing to most of the waiting refugees); demanding that they form lines or sit and wait in certain places. They are treated like the goats on the island. This is not the way to treat anyone let alone those who have fled their homes and countries and just made a perilous sea crossing. Over the months we have seen a number of police change their behaviour and become much more understanding and gentle. But there are still many who humiliate the refugees and make life difficult for volunteers and activists. We continue to experience police harassment when giving lifts to refugees. And this is hardly surprising for the front line behaviours of some police reflect and represent one powerful dimension in the system’s response to the refugees; namely they are not like us so we don’t have to treat them as we would our own families and friends.
So whilst we have no expectations of the system, of authority at whatever level, its extreme abandonment of people running for their lives and washing up on the shores of the EU provokes anger and dismay. What does this say about the place where we live and the world we live in. The very system which is so deeply implicated in the causes of the refugee crisis turns its back when the victims wash up on their shores. It is a crime that refugees are dying every week making the sea crossing from Turkey. It can be stopped immediately by providing access to ferries and opening a safe land passage in the north of Greece.
The mega NGOs are no better. Medicin Sans Frontier (MSF) are now here and creating a significant team which might make a difference. But as for the rest of the big humanitarian NGOs; nothing. Many on Samos have one question for you: Where are you?
Volunteers and Activists
In contrast to authority the humanitarian responses of volunteers and activists have been extraordinary in trying to meet some of the basic needs of the refugees who briefly pass through Samos. Dictated by daily fluctuations in arrivals they have fed, clothed, rescued, comforted and supported thousands of refugees. They are the front line.
This effort has been almost entirely driven from the bottom up. Individuals, small groups of friends, tourists and visitors, rather than organisations have been at the forefront in giving immediate practical aid to the refugees. Over the summer a momentum developed as more people understood that the best way to help was to go to the ports and see what was needed. Food, clothes, shoes, baby stuff, toys all came to be supplied on a daily basis by an ad hoc collection of volunteers, who as time has passed have come to know one another and work in co-operation.
The realities confronting us are what drives our actions; the needs of the refugees in the port are obvious, and we have no need for some sort of co-ordinating committee. Also there are no limits to what is needed. So we must do what we can and what we are happy/good at. All of us have lives away from the port so it is not easy to commit to a rota or timetable. These are huge challenges for many of the volunteers as it is so difficult to stop in the face of so much need. Yet it is incredible how much time is given and how many give food in particular, on a daily basis. So whilst there maybe some loose ends it has worked and endured for some months now.
And we have got better. Clothing stores have been created alongside collections; there is now a former shop in Agios Konstantinos which is kept in constant readiness with the supplies needed for the early morning boat arrivals; a relationship has been created with a local restaurant that can supply a hot meal; endless relationships with shops and pharmacies that discount for the refugees have been established and we fund raise. And we have improved our ways of helping.
We no longer see cans of beer being left at the port and rarely food containing pork meat. There are endless moving scenes as people come down to help and even though most only stay on the island for less than 2 days it can still be enough time for some firm friendships to be forged.
Practical pressing needs set the context for all this effort. Organising food, making and distributing sandwiches with the refugees involved, getting to the beaches, finding the right sized shoes and clothes for wet people; transporting them to the ports or the medical centre/hospital; getting them to a wi fi café and giving basic information are what dominate the days.
There can be moments of misunderstandings and sometimes language barriers. The refugees have absolutely no idea who we are when we turn up on the beaches and at the ports. So it is not entirely surprising when some – and a surprisingly small number – think we are paid Aid workers and demand specific services on the expectation that we are being paid to do this. (So we have had some bizarre moments when we have had to explain to a young man why we cannot provide the jacket with desired label or why we don’t offer a menu from which to choose their supper.) But these are not common. It is amazing how quickly they grasp who and what we are and actively want to help us and embrace us with much love and enthusiasm, when we ourselves feel we have been able to give them so little.
In the limited time available we strive to help in ways that build and strengthen their solidarity. We always try to get the refugees involved as they are not passive victims and not the least once they have been processed by the port police there is a lot of hanging around and many of the refugees want to be involved and doing something to help one another. For many, the benefits of solidarity have been proved during the journey and especially in the sea crossing to Samos. For the Syrians in particular, the exodus has many implications and consequences. It is a great leveller where people often from wide backgrounds who had little contact with one another in Syria are now literally in the same boat facing danger together. Whereas the civil war and chaos of Syria deepened divisions, the exodus on the other hand brings them together in new ways and with new challenges. It is interesting to see how many of the ‘boat groups’ stick together and plan to move as one on through Europe and up towards Germany or Sweden.
Sharing is emphasised and people are challenged if they take more when others have little. The groups on many occasions have made sure that that they can all move off Samos together by collecting for the fares of the minority who have no money. For the refugees their solidarities are going to be their greatest strength during the onward journeys and beyond. After all although they are running from war, their common destinations of Germany or Sweden are hardly paradises. There are difficult times ahead where their solidarities are going to be very important to their well-being.
Only occasionally do we see volunteers behaving as if they were the story. Some leap at the chance to be interviewed by any passing media, or take ‘selfies’ as they hand out some bottles of water and then broadcast it on their Facebook pages. But they are the exception. There have been some visiting activists who arrive wearing T shirts identifying themselves as something or other and that seems odd simply because it is so unusual. Modesty and low profile would best characterise most of the volunteers we see in action.
We now have a Facebook page where we post smaller pieces and updates. This can be found at https://www.facebook.com/Samos-Refugees-Πρόσφυγες-στη-Σαμο-876937855721695
Amr Magdi wrote: Just told
[quote=Amr Magdi]
Just told by activists who witnessed an Iranian detainee having a heart attack in custody and Idomeni Police was just watching.
@ganobi the guy is around 40 and police watched him in terrible medical condition for 30 min at least before calling an ambulance.
[/quote]
[quote=Peter Bouckaert]
Iranian had asthmatic & cardiac attack at Idomeni police station, police waiting more than 1/2 hour b4 calling ambulance. Unacceptable.
[/quote]
Given some misleading claims
Given some misleading claims being made about where people currently arriving in Greece are coming from...
UNHCR statistics for refugee arrivals in Greece so far this year
Video - Larissa and
Video - Larissa and Aharnaikos players in sit down protest against deaths of children in the Aegean
Report on this in Greek
Edit: report in English
An NGOish view on relations
An NGOish view on relations between volunteers and NGOs on Lesvos. It would be interesting to see the reactions of volunteers to this. I get the feeling it misses an awful lot out.
Refugee flows to Lesvos: evolution of a humanitarian response
From the intro to an earlier article by the same writer, now program director for a small NGO on the island:
It might also be interesting to consider how this kind of background colours his interpretation of the situation on Lesvos.
New law for volunteer/NGO
New law for volunteer/NGO registration on the islands (in Greek)
Hopefully someone will come up with a translation and some analysis of this.
Another sinking on the
Another sinking on the crossing to Lesvos, 39 deaths reported
Golden Dawn and anti-fascist
Golden Dawn and anti-fascist demos in Athens today, despite the first ever Syriza ban on demonstrations. This follows migrants being attacked by fascists yesterday, and visiting German neo-nazis being beaten up by anti-fascists in a restaurant in Monastiraki the night before.
Quote: New law for
Some more on this here:
Refugee crisis: Council proposals on migrant smuggling would criminalise humanitarian assistance by civil society, local people and volunteers
Statewatch
Edit - Times report based on this:
'Tourists who help drowning migrants face prosecution'
Philippa Kempson wrote: Last
[quote=Philippa Kempson]
Last night the medical tent in Eftalou was attacked for the third time this week but this time they finished the job and burnt it to the ground!
[/quote]
video
DresdenBalkanKonvoi
[quote=DresdenBalkanKonvoi]
#Chios: currently more than 3,000 people in camps - supplied by volunteers. EU, meanwhile, wasted money for Frontex.
The #Frontex border guards deal with it to harass volunteers. We will at least once searched and questioned per day.
[/quote]
Moria camp, the hopelessness
Moria camp, the hopelessness of trying to work with the UNHCR and NGOs.
[quote=David Zorrakino]
#UNCHR se niega a dar mantas con 500 de ellas en el almacén. Sus trabajadores dicen que lo dice el boss y no pueden perder el puesto.
Llegan mojados a Moria y estamos luchando literalmente por 30 mantas. @SamaritansPurse y #UNCHR alegan que tienen que recontar de nuevo.
@SamaritansPurse cierra la tienda de distribución porqué es la hora de cenar de los voluntarios a sueldo. ¿No importa más la gente mojada?
La trabajadora de #UNCHR sale a fuera de la carpa a decir 'We don't have more tents'. Hay 3 cajas llenas dentro.
Las grandes ONG's de Moria están más pendientes de los recuentos y las cifras que de las necesidades reales.
Si de alguna no puedo ir en contra es de mis principios. Abandono la tienda de distribución, no quiero formar parte de esto.
@DavidZorrakino Pero por qué? No comprendo nada
@RRTRPGGRL "Porqué lo dice el boss", literalmente. Ya estoy fuera.
@RRTRPGGRL No logro entenderlo. Dicen que son las normas.
'No hay lavadas de segunda mano y las nuevas no se pueden usar." Asín de claro.
Que no pueden desobedecer, que siguen las órdenes, que hay que recontar, que si las dan van a perder el sueldo. Están trabajando.
El periodista cuervo, el voluntario de chaleco y el samaritano de profesión. @SamaritansPurse
Y mientras la gente pasaba frío, mojada, temblando, mofándose de a ver quién llamaba al jefe. Esto es muy serio.
Pues nada. Que no hay más tiendas. Buenas noches, Moria.
[/quote]
Legal dehumanising: on the
Legal dehumanising: on the arrest of refugee solidarity activists
Teacher Dude wrote: 47
[quote=Teacher Dude]
47 #refugees saved off coast off #Chios island arrested by Greek police for not having valid travel papers http://www.seleo.gr/koinwnia/201993-diesosan-prosfyges-anoixta-tis-xiou-kai-meta-tous-
[/quote]
Video blog from Eric Kempson
Video blog from Eric Kempson - the right wing in Molyvos, the main tourist town on Lesvos, trying to shut down the new Hope Centre, a previously disused hotel rented and set up by volunteers as a temporary transit point for refugees. See the previous videos on Eric Kempson's youtube channel for more on the Hope Centre.
Actually out of season refugees on the islands could perfectly well be housed in holiday accommodation rather then in tented camps (or out in the rain and snow if the camps are full). As it is hotel and room owners are prevented by law from taking in refugees before they've been registered, at which point they can get on a ferry to the mainland anyway. It's a measure of the Syriza government's failure that they couldn't even do anything to change this. And in this case at least the failure can't be put down to the EU or the economic crisis.
This story yet adds another
This story yet adds another aspect to a tangled tale of brutality from Greek state and European forces, and the abject surrender before this by Syriza.
As far as outright repression of the refugees goes, there are a number of actors here. We all know what the Greek police and coastguard can be capable of - their actions have been caught on film and an estimated 50% of their staff voted for Golden Dawn.
There is also Frontex (Europe's border police), and now the IRC too. The Turkish authorities are none too angelic either, yet within all these forces and despite their dominant authoritarian and hostile norms, a wide range of behaviour in individual incidents, and even on occasion humanity, has been observed.
But there is also a 'third force' who are utterly vile, and I wonder if anyone with knowledge can comment. These are clandestine pirates/commandos in speedboats who attack the refugees around the Greek island coasts from Lesvos to Rhodos. We only have survivors' tales to go on, plus a few ambiguous fragments on video, and although the reliability of witness statements needs to be questioned, they share enough similar features to form a distinctive pattern.
These actors are armed, masked and murderous, stopping at nothing to terrify and/or potentially kill refugees in their attempts to turn them back. Often they rob, and sometimes they deflate the refugee dinghies. They have been seen in close coordination with the Hellenic coastguard, yet on at least one occasion the latter intervened to stop them. Survivors speak of random national flags being flown, or none at all. A range of languages that these 'pirates' use are also reported, from Latvian to German or English. It is not entirely clear, but such attack craft seem to be launched from larger 'mother ships', again of unidentifiable origin.
You can find stories online about this phenomenon from The Huffington Post, RT, CNN, Sputnik News and Vice News in various media formats, and HRW commissioned a report, yet little deep research as to who the culprits are has been done. Refugees who travel this route all know these stories and/or have had direct experience. The theories as to who the pirates/commandos are as follows:
1) Criminal gangs (but why the uniform equipment, and the sophisticated organisation/back up?)
2) Greek nazi paramilitaries? (however, Golden Dawn is generally very weak on the islands)
3) The Hellenic coastguard's 'special forces' (but then why the medley of tongues?)
4) A new special forces wing of Frontex, or even multiple special forces
5) Mercenaries (Dyncorp etc) employed by agents unknown who want to keep a low profile
6) A mix of some or even all of the above?
What I'm really driving at is whether there's any connections between all these murky threads. It could be that the explanation is quite simple and 'straightforward' (but still an outrage), or it could be a can of worms that goes all the way to centres of power in Europe or even beyond. Just how far are the people in power who want to control the movements of populations prepared to go?
Azdak - you might want to
Azdak - you might want to look at the 2013 ProAsyl report on push backs, which tbh I've only skimmed through very quickly myself. The report describes the situation under the previous government and in theory this should have all changed. However the descriptions of coast guard special forces that I've quoted below do sound rather like the masked men disabling boats in reports from the last year. My assumption has been that the masked men are something to do with the Greek coast guard, or other armed forces (given Greek-Turkish relations there's a significant military presence on these islands), and have been operating without government authorisation but essentially continuing previous policies. This is conjecture though - it's not something I'm sure about. I haven't seen reports of them speaking languages other than Greek or English before and I don't have an explanation for this. I'm sceptical about direct Frontex involvement. After all why take part in something that's potentially so damaging for their image? But again I can't be certain.
'What is wrong with this
'What is wrong with this picture? A quiz on Greece and the refugee crisis'
Thanks for posting all this
Thanks for posting all this information, Mark.
Thanks a lot for the
Thanks a lot for the reference on push backs, Mark, I will consult it and add it to my research.
Yes I agree that the evidence is very confusing and ambiguous. It is also clear that the Hellenic coastguard special forces are involved directly in some of the push backs (as they're called) but in other cases it's not clear at all. Certain tactics are common to all, as is the masking. However...
The ones I term 'commando/pirate' seem to be specifically carried out by boats smaller than the types used by Hellenic coastguard special forces. They seem to work with some kind of 'mother ship'. Insignia are either absent or of random/multiple nationality. Language too is polyglot - I've heard of German, English or Latvian being spoken - though this is of course impossible to verify. Weaponry is oddly uniform - either US made M4s or M16s in all cases. I checked out the Hellenic coastguard special forces, and from their videos they clearly use a mix of weapon manufacturers and countries of origin (German, Russian etc, as well as American).
In once recorded case, it was the Greek coastguard who intervened to save a sinking refugee boat from certain death at the hands of these commandos, and the interesting bit is that the latter 'waved a piece of paper at the coastguard vessel'. So what was this piece of paper - a letter of marque that informed the coastguard that they were to back off and that the masked men had higher authority? Luckily for the survivors, in this case the captain's humanity overruled his orders and the tactic didn't work.
In another case, in broad daylight, Turkish fishermen in the vicinity of a dingy and what turned out to be the mother ship, warned the refugees to 'keep away from the European boat'. An attack by small craft lowered into the water followed on from this.
The swaggering, brutal behaviour and unaccountability of the pirates/commandos recalls nothing more closely than the activities of the mercenary companies such as Blackwater and Dyncorp in Iraq during the 2000s.
Yes I agree it would be risky for Frontex to be too closely involved in such heinous activity, but if it was done by mercenaries... maybe not? Or maybe the authority of origin is not even Frontex as such, but someone else?
My theory remains speculative at present and I will keep my conclusions open. At this stage it seems certain that whoever is responsible, elements of the Hellenic coastguard are intimately involved, whether as sole perpetrators or as auxiliaries. What we need now is a whistle blower from the coastguard to step forward and confirm what's really going on one way or another.
Life on the ground in Lesvos
[quote=Life on the ground in Lesvos]
Things change here all the time. The most recent development is that FRONTEX (EU border control) are now rescuing most of the boats as soon as they reach Greek waters and then bringing them straight to the port. This is great news as regards safety for the second half of the crossing, however there are many reports of push backs by the Turkish coast guard which counters the good news.
We do also wonder that if the EU are really committed to saving people, why not just let them get on the 10 euro ferry and come over safely with the everyone else.
....
[/quote]
[quote=David Zorrakino]
Hoy, cero barcas en Skala Skamineas. La policía turca y la griega controlan por mar y aire la costa norte de #Lesvos.
Cuatro barcas rumbo Skala Skamineas están siendo interceptadas por #Frontex. Rescue Teams las traen vacías.
Es la segunda mañana con movimientos extraños. Se empiezan a hacer las transferencias en altamar antes del desembarque.
Los dingy's son interceptados por #Frontex con la ayuda obligada de los equipos de rescate. Los dirigen a Mytilene directamente.
De momento, sólo ha llegado una barca a las 8 de la mañana a The Chaple, zona 2. Las demás están en manos de Frontex.
[/quote]
[quote=Michael Räber]
Greek coast guard & Frontex vessels rescue now all #refugeesGr on entering greek waters & bring them to ports. No beach landings south t/d.
@iwatnew What happen with refugees when they arrive port?
@victormsmadrid Same procedure as always when rescued by coastguard. Names are taken then transported by bus to registration camp Moria.
Two #refugeesGr boats landed on coast after midnight in north and northeast #Lesvos. Total 55 ppl. Not rescued by coastguard nor Frontex.
Since 2d coastguard rescues #refugeesGr reaching #Greece waters #Lesvos. Costly operation. Still no #safepassage.
[/quote]
Quote: This morning, the 1st
source
Arwa Damon wrote: #refugees
[quote=Arwa Damon]
#refugees & #migrants tired of waiting at #greece gas station start walk 2 border w/#macedonia
[/quote]
[quote=MSF Sea]
UPDATE: After ferry & farmer strikes & delays at #Polykastro,1000s of #people have had enough & now walk to #Idomeni
[/quote]
[quote=Forgotten in Idomeni]
HAPPENING NOW! Aprox 1000 people are walking on the main road heading to the border #Idomeni. Follow: https://www.facebook.com/forgotten.idomeni/
People walking to the border. Over 20kms. Sun is going down. What will happen when they get there?
People starting to take rests on the side of the road. Its nearly dark. Not sure how people will shelter for the night.
The border is currently closed. #idomeni camp is full and at the same time +1000 refugees are walking from #Polycastro on foot to Idomeni
3000 at the station. Volunteers are driving up and down the high way and monitoring the situation. It is a 5 hour walk to the border
[/quote]
Paul Mason - Europe’s refugee
Paul Mason - Europe’s refugee story has hardly begun
I think this is largely true, and Paul Mason's report is a useful summary, but he could have made some mention of the conflicts going on between volunteers and the Greek authorities. It would be more helpful if the left didn't gloss over Syriza's part in this. At this point it seems problematic to me to be writing about the pressure being placed on Greece without also mentioning the internal repression.
Health and safety on Lesvos -
Health and safety on Lesvos - cooking food for refugees has been banned outside licensed bars and restaurants.
[quote=David Zorrakino]
Por "medidas sanitarias", a partir de hoy se prohíbe a los campos de refugiadas cocinar en ellos. A pan y agua.
Sólo será posible té, agua enbotellada, frutas con cáscara y bocadillos sencillos.
@DavidZorrakino Eso en el Norte o en el Sur? O en toda la isla?
@alitwittt En toda la isla. Sin licencia no es posible.
Servir comida sólo será posible si está cocinada en un bar o restaurante para poder distribuirla. Se suman las complicaciones.
La represión contra la solidaridad en #Lesvos es cada vez mayor. El transporte pasó a ser tráfico ilegal y la comida, insalubridad.
[/quote]
Forgotten in Idomeni
[quote=Forgotten in Idomeni]
The situation in #Idomeni is tense. Now almost all people are here. Is 8000 people close to real number of people?
....
They’re not letting more people enter into the camp #Idomeni. Must be 1500 inside max but 5000 outside. Many dont have shelter
[/quote]
Lesvos today - video blog
Lesvos today - video blog from Eric Kempson. He sounds positive about the new coast guard policy of picking up refugees at sea.
[quote=Sea Watch]
Lesbos update 2nd February 2016
For a few days now Hellenic Coastguard is operating a huge rescue vessel in the north of #Lesbos. All refugees that are crossing for the island are transferred from their unsafe rubber boats to this ship and brought to land safely in cherishing cooperation with us and the other action forces.
The Greek Coastguard is in this way performing a first policy shift towards life saving measures.
Yet that does not make conditions human: Refugees are still drowning almost every day - in Turkish waters. The pact made with EU worth billions of Euros is clearly leaving marks on Turkey that is sabotaging and imposing sanctions on refugee traffic.
We are critically observing the situation in the Aegean.
[/quote]
However...
[quote=Faloulah]
Greek military now in charge of #refugeecrisis response - that's in case you were wondering if things for #RefugeesGR could get any worse.
[/quote]
[quote=Asteris]
Thanks to EU pressure, the civilian leadership isn't in charge of refugee crisis response anymore in Greece https://twitter.com/ekathimerini/status/694606897412861952
Having the military help w setting up infrastructure is one thing (and needed), having it *in charge* of the response is alarming.
Once again, srsly: these are the kind of developments people should be going "whoa! wtf!" over https://twitter.com/SteliosBouras1/status/694478932633096192
"Closed military zone," 2 weeks ago; we'll be seeing this a lot more often wrt to refugee centers in Greece https://twitter.com/filiopk/status/690558448799473665
[/quote]
A question about the situation at Idomeni...
[quote=Andrew Connelly]
When this border closes, whose job will it be to move these people into camps in Greece? And to make them stay? https://twitter.com/zolinphoto/status/694642574548717569
[/quote]
[quote=Daphne Tolis]
The army? For those waiting around the border crossing area and/or "military zone". @connellyandrew @zolinphoto
[/quote]
David Zorrakino
[quote=David Zorrakino]
Autobuses y camiones de las fuerzas militares griegas se despliegan hoy en Mytilini, #Lesvos, para el control terrestre y aéreo de la isla.
[/quote]
'Buses and trucks of the Greek armed forces are spreading out today in Mytilene, Lesvos for ground and air control of the island.'
.
Kathimerini - Greek military to oversee response to refugee crisis
Lesvos - the coast guard are
Lesvos - the coast guard are picking up some but not all refugees at sea.
[quote=MSF Sea]
UPDATE: Beautiful weather in #Lesvos means that 7 boats have so far arrived in the north of the island today.
[/quote]
[quote=Michael Räber]
Lesvos southeast coast. Since 2am: 8 boats rescued coastguard, 4 boats landed ashore, 2 now on water.
Now: #Greece coastguard still tries to rescue all #refugeesGr boats in greek waters off #Lesvos. ~80% successful.
[/quote]
[quote=David Zorrakino]
@PROACTIVA_SERV remolca el primer dingy a Skala Skamineas tras tres días sin desembarques.
Una lancha rápida soltó ayer a media noche a 25 afganos en Kagia Beach. La policía tuvo un trato desagradable con los locales en su ayuda.
El dingy desembarca en la playa de Skala Skamineas con la ayuda de @PROACTIVA_SERV y ya está recibiendo la solidaridad de @team_platanos.
Desembarca otra barca con almenos 50 refugiadas en el Campo de @LighthouseRR remolcada por @PROACTIVA_SERV. Welcome!
El Coast Guard de la Hellenic Navy hoy no está en altamar. En un día soleado y con apenas vigilancia visible, #Lesvos recobra su normalidad.
11.23 de la mañana en #Lesvos. El recuento suma 7 botes en la costa norte de la isla, 3 en Skala Skamineas.
@PROACTIVA_SERV humaniza a la H. Navy. Gritos, disparos y malos tratos propios de una actitud militar se anulan con su presencia.
Skala Skamineas ya cuenta con 2 agentes de la Guardia Civil. Esta mañana "revisaban" con el cuerpo griego los motores de los dingys.
[/quote]
Daphne Tolis
[quote=Daphne Tolis]
Permission now needed from Piraeus Port Authority for solidarity groups present when refugees arrive. @BrunoTersago https://twitter.com/refugees_gr/status/694825533113245700
[/quote]
EU Blackmail worked: Greece
EU Blackmail worked: Greece to rush for 5 hot spots & 2 relocation camps – but many questions still open
One point in this is Yiannis Mouzalas claiming that in December only 45-60 per cent of arrivals were refugees when in fact around 90 per cent have consistently been from Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan. I think the implication here is that they're aiming to divide arrivals into 'refugees' and 'migrants' and deport the 'migrants' back to Turkey. It isn't obvious why Turkey should go along with this.
Statewatch links on the
Statewatch links on the refugee crisis
Σχετικά με τους αλληλέγγυους
Σχετικά με τους αλληλέγγυους στους πρόσφυγες στα νησιά
Ποινικοποίηση της αλληλεγγύης και πιστοποιήσεις
Το πλήρες σχέδιο του ΥΕΘΑ για το προσφυγικό - Οι λεπτομέρειες για τα hotpost και τα στρατόπεδα
From
From eumigrationlawblog.eu
Hotspots and Relocation Schemes: the right therapy for the Common European Asylum System?
In Greek Protest march on
In Greek
Protest march on Saturday against the enforced registration of volunteers and solidarity activists, organised by the Lesvos initiative for solidarity with immigrants (Λεσβιακή Πρωτοβουλία Αλληλεγγύης σε Μεταναστες-τριες). I think this must be in Mytilene.
https://mobile.twitter.com/Fr
https://mobile.twitter.com/Frontex
.
State of play of hotspot capacity
«Είστε ανεπιθύμητοι!» Οι
«Είστε ανεπιθύμητοι!» Οι πρόσφυγες, η Ευρώπη και η Ελλάδα
In Catalan Sara Montesinos -
In Catalan
Sara Montesinos - Impuls als camps autogestionats de refugiats a Lesbos
Laia Altarriba - Calma estranya a l’illa dels refugiats
Facebook post from
Facebook post from yesterday
[quote=Are you Syrious?]
#SYRIA: A huge new wave of up to 70,000 refugees, fleeing mostly from north Aleppo area, have started moving towards Turkey, many of them reaching the border today. The exodus began on Monday after government forces backed up by Russian air strikes began an operation that has severed the main rebel supply route into the city and broken an opposition siege on two regime-held towns, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights confirmed. AYS volunteer from the ground reports a chaos on Bab Al Salameh / Kilis border crossing, with thousands of new refugees reaching the border today (pictured here, photos taken in the morning, and then again at 7PM). The border remained closed today, leaving thousands of desperate refugees waiting on Syrian side, some of them resorting to smugglers in order to enter Turkey. According to info from the ground, Turkish authorities have promised to open the border tomorrow. As Turkish camps are mostly overcrowded, many of new refugees will probably be heading to Greece soon.
....
#GREECE: Yesterday, 3,299 new refugees were registered on Greek islands, including 2,046 on Lesvos, 806 on Chios, 255 on Leros, 87 in Southern Dodecanese, 86 on Samos and 11 on Kos, while 3,829 have departed for Greek mainland. By 9PM today, only two boats have landed on south Lesvos shores, while other numbers are still missing.
Early this morning on #Lesvos, where residents are participating in Greek general strike, BDFM, the South Coast teams, Swiss Cross, ERCI, Ceriba, Mahracar, Pikpa and many independent volunteers came together to transport all the refugees to the port in time for the special 6.45AM ferrry while the buses and taxis were striking. It was a great team effort and no one missed the ferry to Athens!
Potential new volunteers on Lesvos must be aware that work at the beach is now restricted to specialised volunteers and authorised organisations. The same is with Moria Camp, which is getting more and more difficult to access even for registered and previously authorised Better Days for Moria, I AM YOU, etc. However, if you really want to go to Lesvos, there's still plenty of work to be done. We suggest following this group for extensive Lesvos volunteer info: http://on.fb.me/1NSLVcO
In #Athens, Elliniko camp is full of people, both inside and outside, hosting up to 3,000 people according to some volunteer estimations. As most buses didn't depart from Athens due to general strike today, #Piraeus port is also crowded. After another ferry was announced late in the evening, police has told the volunteers to prepare port terminal E1 for 200 refugees sleeping there.
Situation is still very hard in #Polykastro and #Idomeni, with conflicting reports about 50-70 buses on EKO bus station, while up to 6,000 people are sleeping in Idomeni camp. Document check-ups and border procedures are still very slow, leaving a lot of people stranded on the border (pictured here). If you want to volunteer in Greece, this area needs most support at the moment.
....
[/quote]
Omaira Gill wrote: Urgent
[quote=Omaira Gill]
Urgent call for volunteers @ Pireaus port today,100s of families stranded overnight due to general strike, only 4 volunteers currently there
As usual, absolutely no official presence or coordination at Piraeus. Volunteers doing it all @tsipras_eu #refugees
[/quote]
[quote=NoBorders]
Only port police presence and yesterday they were asking volunteers to REGISTRATE. It's a nightmare
Any supplies you can offer urgently needed at Piraeus port.Try contact volunteers, station inside gateE1
@Refugees_Gr do you know why these people are stuck at the port? aren't buses for Idomeni leaving?
@filiopk because of the strikes. This started yesterday morning after many ship arrivals. I'll get updates in a few minutes
We remind that at Piraeus port there is NO official medical or social presence, organisations or NGOs
[/quote]
Solidarity Team Platanos
[quote=Solidarity Team Platanos]
Protest February 6/2 at 11:00, central high schools area, Mytilene
while Europe is building fences and borders,
while Frontex, the coastguard and the greek police repress every initiative to help the refugees,
while the institutional separation of refugees/migrants traps thousands of people in detention centres and concentrations camps,
while immigrants face racist attacks and economic exploitation everyday,
We will keep fighting for open borders, free movement and safe passage for everyone,
Against the fictitious segregation of people into refugees and immigrants,
Against a Europe that builds fences and walls
Unmediated solidarity!
-Lesvos Initiative of Solidarity to Immigrants
-Platanos Self-organized Structure
[/quote]
'The army in command, the
'The army in command, the refugees inside, society far away'
Ο στρατός στο κουμάντο, οι πρόσφυγες μέσα, η κοινωνία μακριά
Video from the No Border
Video from the No Border Kitchen on a beach outside Mytilene, operating since November without official authorisation and presumably under threat from the new restrictions.
As far as registration goes I'm still not sure how significant it is. This account by a volunteer makes it sound more of a minor bureaucratic hurdle, but it does give the authorities the opportunity to prevent individuals or groups from helping, and I suppose withdraw permission if they feel like it.
Video from the Refugee
Video from the Refugee Solidarity Movement Thessaloniki and Idomeni
The newly opened Soli Cafe on
The newly opened Soli Cafe on Chios, the target of a police raid and arrests a couple of weeks ago.
Leros Solidarity Network
[quote=Leros Solidarity Network]
Leros Solidarity Network has pioneered humanitarian refugee reception, setting up PIKPA and The Villa, 2 purposely converted buildings that offer refuge to vulnerable refugees, mostly women and children. The volunteers who work within them, full of compassion and love for humankind care for the refugees they host like their own family members. The refugees that pass through these centres are so grateful for the glimpse of humanity they have been offered. We are now being threatened with the closure of these sites in favour of the hotspot detention centre. We have seen the difference that our approach has made to the people we have met, and will now start campaigning for these initiatives to be allowed to remain open to continue their work. We will campaign against the de-humanising of the refugees which is inevitable in the proposed hotspot.
[/quote]
[quote=Leros Solidarity Network]
Why is Pikpa so important?
The politics of numbers: Inhuman refugee reception
The recent refugee crisis has been called one of the greatest humanitarian disasters since the Second World War. The LSN concurs. We believe that the only disaster greater than this is the total absence of political vision on the part of our elected leaders to adequately respond to it. In a confused and confusing way they sit and haggle over numbers: how many can be processed; how many can be allowed through a fence; how many can find a place in a country.
Numbers. And in the media, we read about the crisis in terms of numbers all the time: five thousand refugees crossing daily onto Greek islands; one million who have survived the treacherous journey across European borders; 3600 dead in trying to arrive. These figures are sensational. They describe things, entities, bodies, in a way that excites shock, horror, fear. These emotions encourage us to accept political solutions, which are driven by the principles of administrative efficiency and order, rather than human compassion, dignity and empathy.
Our political leaders engage with a game of numbers that is focused on finding a rapid solution to a human problem, which leaves the human beings out of the equation. They seem to believe that if we get ‘all these bodies’ in one place and hold them there, we can solve the refugee crisis. “Hot spots” are ways of corralling, detaining, holding people in order to assess and validate claims for asylum. They are about managing numbers.
In a supremely cynical move, the municipal government on Leros proposes to open up Lepida as a “hotspot” to house refugees. Lepida is associated with the concentration camp for political prisoners held under the Junta and with the infamous mental hospital that became renowned for the treatment of its incarcerated as insensate beasts. Lepida, like all concentration camps in Europe, is not simply a “place”; it is a place of memory. Like all concentration camps, it is a place, which gave birth to a European conscience, a collective commitment to democracy, human rights and the rule of law. It is a place, which reminds us why it is essential to protect these principles.
The conversion of Lepida into a European “hotspot “ is a cynical dismissal of this history. But it is also a clarion call to Europeans. How governments should manage the refugee crisis is opening a major political fault line. On one side are those who believe in a policy based on the principle of administrative efficiency. On the other, is the international solidarity movement, that which upholds the primacy of the principles of democracy, human rights and the rule of law. By some quirk of fate, Leros is an epicenter of this divide, which is being drawn across a struggle between two institutions dedicated to two fundamentally different visions of refugee reception: Lepida (seen in these photos) and Pikpa (mentioned previously).
Madalena Grossmann
[/quote]
[quote=A Fortnight in Leros]
....
The traffickers do not bring their charges directly to Leros, given the risk of prosecution and imprisonment. Entry without a visa is of course illegal, as well, but the sheer numbers make enforcement almost impossible. Usually, the refugees bound for Leros are deposited on Farmakonisi, a bare island with a small military base where they must wait for days to be picked up by the Greek coast guard or a merchant marine vessel, the VOS Grace donated by Britain to aid the search-and-rescue missions in the Aegean Sea.
The inhumane conditions on Farmakonisi have provoked charges of human rights violations against the Greek military. A refugee traveling with his wife and young daughter told me how he and a group of 80 others were penned up on the barren island for five days. Soldiers were shooting into the air to intimidate them. Instead of feeding them, as required by law, the soldiers were blithely selling them water and biscuits. Sleeping on the ground in the rain, he watched other starving refugees eat snails.
....
[/quote]
Which doesn't sound promising for the military takeover of the refugee crisis.
Report from Idomeni
Report from Idomeni
Action day against fortress
Action day against fortress Europe
https://mobile.twitter.com/hashtag/actionday0602?src=hash
Kathimerini wrote: Greek
[quote=Kathimerini]
Greek authorities agreed on Friday to recognize Turkey as a “safe third country,” which means migrants for whom Turkey is a country of transit, not of origin, can be returned there.
The decision was announced after a meeting in Athens between Greek Interior Minister Panayiotis Kouroublis and his French and German counterparts, Bernard Cazeneuve and Thomas de Maiziere.
“This is a major step for Greece and we are taking it because we want to show our willingness to find a comprehensive way to address the problem,” said Kouroublis after the meeting. European officials said the shift in Greek policy was a “good start.”
The goal “cannot just be to register arriving refugees and to relocate them equitably [but above all] to reduce the flow,” said de Maiziere at the end of his two-day visit. He added that Germany is sending 100 police officers and two coast guard vessels to Greece.
....
[/quote]
[quote=Asteris Masouras]
For shame, @tsipras_eu, Turkey has deported Syrians back to Assad/IS
Ping me if you see video statements of Tsipras saying Turkey is a safe country for Syrian refugees. For posterity.
Turkey isn't even safe for its own citizens, let alone refugees. Expediency doesn't trump humanity, Europe https://twitter.com/dilkocer/status/695926910182957056
[/quote]
[quote=Benjamin Julian]
Top EU officials remind Turkey of its obligations to keep frontiers open to refugees. The irony is unbearable.
[/quote]
[quote=Bruno Tersago]
EU says Turkey must keep border open to Syrian refugees - This is some serious trolling http://f24.my/1QjuGDu
[/quote]
.
EU Law Analysis - The EU, Turkey and the refugee crisis: what could possibly go wrong?
Teacher Dude wrote: Lots of
[quote=Teacher Dude]
Lots of Greek riot police at Polykastro gas station nr #Idomeni. 1000s of #refugees there as well.
Gas station sound system playing recorded message in Arabic, Farsi, English earning people not to leave the grounds.
Not sure what we can expect at #Idomeni today, even if we'll be allowed access. Demo in progress, police blocked roads
....
Long, difficult day at #Idomeni. Made even more difficult by @UNHCRGreece who needed nearly 2 hours to give us permission to set up.
We've been going up to #Idomeni twice a week since September yet we virtually have to beg to be given a few sq metres of space to work
When we were helping in summer the only UNHCR presence was 2 witless clowns who'd shout insults at exhausted refugees.
We are not a bunch of amateurs who just turn up out of nowhere. We work well with other groups and make sure our work doesn't impact others
Border now closed at #Idomeni, camps gradually filling up, temperatures dropping to near zero
Greek police giving volunteers at the clothing tent a hard time, threatening to shut them down.
[/quote]
Clowns Without Borders on the
Clowns Without Borders on the new conditions for volunteers on Lesvos, including exclusion from camps.
'Desperate EU to criminalize
'Desperate EU to criminalize humanitarian assistance in Greece'
Protest in Mytilene yesterday
Protest in Mytilene yesterday here and here
Refugee Support wrote: 35000
[quote=Refugee Support]
35000 refugees from #Aleppo arrived at Turkish border at #Kilis. But border has been closed. Open the border now!
It is a clear violation of the Geneva convention to push back refugees into a war zone (Art. 33)!
governor announced humanitarian supply will be given to refugees in #Syria. Throwing food over fence isn't a solution
refugees arriving now are trying to flee an offensive by Assad's troops and Russian airstrikes in the area of Aleppo.
It's a shame how nobody cared about #pushbacks happening everyday at Turkish border and now all of a sudden as numbers rise in spectacular heights every news agency shows up and all politicians feel the need to say something bout it
#EU specifically asked #Turkey to seal border and now they demand Turkey to open the border?
That's hypocritical bullshit.
[/quote]
[quote=free movement 4 all]
Hotspots are jail camps, targeting on violation of human rights, imposed by Germany
The only reason for incarceration of refugees is illegal deportation. Lets not let that happen.
Volunteers must not help to separate "migrants" from refugees. Their right to apply for asylum is violated.
If #EU would really want Turkey to open the border for Syrians it would enable #Safepassage
By preparing for massive pushbacks and deportations from #Greece #EU & #Frontex push #Turkey to close the border for Syrians.
[/quote]
Samos Refugees / Πρόσφυγες
[quote=Samos Refugees / Πρόσφυγες στη Σαμο]
Nobel Prize Nonsense?
There seems to be some enthusiasm for nominating the people of the Greek frontier islands for the Nobel Peace Prize. Maybe there are some on the islands who would be happy for their efforts to be recognised but there are many others who want nothing to do with such an award.
For a start this is a prize from the 'top' and not from 'below'. It is awarded by the Norwegian parliament which is being increasingly dominated by the populist right Progress Party. The Norwegian government now proudly boasts that it has some of the toughest policies on refugees in the whole of Europe. It is threatening to send back thousands of refugees and cruelly demands that refugees have to spend 4 years in Norway before they can seek family re-unification. We know that the elites of Europe are experts on hypocrisy so we can always be surprised. But who would want an award from that lot ?
Our experience on Samos has been those at the top have been and remain a huge problem. They have done so little to help and so much to make our efforts more difficult. For example, until the middle of the summer 2015 it was against the law of Greece to give a lift to a refugee in your own car. It is beyond counting how many times we were threatened with prosecution for carrying refugees in our vehicles or in our small boats. The authorities here actively tried suppress our humanity; to make us frightened. It was outrageous.
Some of the most courageous activists included many visitors to Samos; people who were on the island as holiday makers and tourists. People who could not stand by in the face of such suffering and joined in with us to feed, clothe and care for the refugees at a time when the Greek state did nothing and when there were none of the big NGOs on the island. Their contribution was massive not the least because they had more money than us. But they have been made invisible in this Nobel nonsense.
Many things have changed on Samos since the summer of 2015. Not only do we have the big NGOs on the island but we also have many 'volunteers'. The latter are a mixed group but it is amazing how quickly some of them become self righteous and pompous in their 'do-goodery'. They never seem to realise that we are deeply offended when they thank us for our efforts. Who do they think they are to 'thank us'. We have done nothing for them. Their arrogance is sometimes breathtaking.
Thankfully not all the volunteers are like this but sadly too many are; they are the ones who enjoy being the story and getting their photos in the papers as they hand out a bottle of water. Facebook is full of their nauseating righteousness where they wallow in feedback which describes them as “awe inspiring” angels and so forth. It wouldn't surprise us to see them wearing campaign medals like I was on Samos/ Chios/ Lesbos/ Kos 2015!
Even worse so many of the volunteers are happy to comply with the current demands of the Greek authorities to be registered and regulated. They seem to actively seek the blessing of the authorities which for years have been and remain part of the problem and never part of the solution.
We do what we do because we are human. To stand and do nothing in the face of the suffering we see on the frontier islands is not an option unless you are prepared to be dehumanised. There is absolutely nothing special about us. But we see heroism constantly. We witness the most amazing solidarities full of compassion and care and love. And it is most evident amongst the refugees. It is their qualities which enable so many to survive and overcome the traumas of both 'the escape' and the journey. Our contribution is nothing compared to this. If there are to be any prizes handed out give them to the refugees.
For us the idea of a Nobel Prize is disgusting and a further sign of a screwed up world where to be a human being is now considered to be worthy of a prize.
[/quote]
Lesvos today Eric Kempson's
Lesvos today Eric Kempson's video blog
Leaked minutes of a meeting
Leaked minutes of a meeting between Erdogan, Juncker and Tusk haggling over the refugee crisis in November. Scroll down past the Greek text to see the minutes in English.
Lesvos: the NGOs talk amongst
Lesvos: the NGOs talk amongst themselves - report from a joint meeting in December.
Benjamin Julian wrote: Your
[quote=Benjamin Julian]
Your life ends here
Another day, another report of deaths at the borders. On Saturday, two women froze to death in the Bulgarian mountains. One of them was a teenage girl. This mountain pass is the way of desperation, for people who can not afford the death boats to Greece.
People subject themselves to this misery and this fatal risk because it offers them the one thing that matters: getting closer to safety, stability and a new chance at life.
This possibility is now rapidly being eroded. Only three nationalities still have it, and even they will only be allowed to stay in Europe while their “home” is suffering war. Then they have to go back. Their possibility of family reunification, which has allowed relatives of healthy young adults to join them later via safe routes, is being restricted. Fences are being built, pushback agreements signed and camps, which no person should ever have to live in, are being proposed as an endpoint for the refugee trail.
Thus everything is brought back to normality. Arabs stay in Arabia, Africans in Africa, and Europeans can again pretend they’re not racist by throwing money at refugees over the five-meter razor-wire fences. People fleeing war will again be portrayed as impotent beggars, not as autonomous subjects that are free to move on their own terms. Freedom of movement will again be reserved for the people who only move if they want to, but never have to. It will again become our luxury product.
Resistance to this apartheid has mostly been offered by the migrants themselves. Ever since thousands of refugees, fed up with delays and blockages, ran across the Macedonian border last August, they have been the dominant force in the course of events.
Since then, hundreds of thousands have made it through borders that kept them from realizing their dreams, and they’re still coming. It is an achievement that decades of European open-border activism could only dream of. But now that such a force has entered the stage, our activism has taken an unexpected turn. Instead of fierce battles for freedom of movement, we have directed our attention at providing food, clothes, shelter. Things to make it more bearable to be stuck somewhere. For the first time in decades, the European public has its eyes on the consequences of border politics, but the drama has been focused on the beaches rather than the fences. Where are the lock-ons, sit-ins, roadblocks, black blocs, banner drops and paint bombs? Where are the protests, political appeals and actions? The European public’s attention is waning, the state’s actions are growing more determined, and still we’re mostly providing the refugees and the public with feel-good activism.
Obviously, food and clothes are important. But they are not what we are being asked for. We are being asked: how can we get to Germany? This, the ongoing possibility of movement, is the all-important point that no amount of soup will resolve. It is also the point that the state is now clearing up all on its own, month by month, by chopping up and regaining control of the Balkan route.
The political activism has largely been left to migrants – and it’s been impressive: They’ve marched to the border against police orders, attacked fences, protested against detention while in prison and blocked roads when they’ve been kept stuck. In the prison at Corinth, two Moroccans even tried jumping out of a window to make a run for it. They broke their legs and got apprehended. When brought before a judge, they named bad food as one of their grievances. The food handler got changed as a result. They now face deportation.
Their case reminds us of two things. Firstly, change comes in small steps. We won’t open all borders with One Big Action – but we do need to start somewhere. There are fences, prisons, camps and government offices all around, offering opportunities for protest and direct action. There are companies, essential to the functioning of refugee segregation, that specialize in separating nationalities by listening to their accents. These methods and practices have to be protested, one by one, to resist their ever harsher use.
Secondly, the Moroccans’ fate reminds us how easy and risk-free it is for us to protest. We are not at risk of being deported into the cold, hard hands of a repressive regime. We have experienced protesters and activists in our ranks and passports that give us significant political freedoms. It is essential that we use them, not just for migrants, but for our own society’s sake. A society that kills people at its borders, segregates them, makes them drown and freeze to death, a society that resolves a mass movement of people fleeing war by storing them in containers for years, is a society that breeds evil. It is imperative that we resist it.
[/quote]
Greece with Simon Reeve -
Greece with Simon Reeve - travel show filmed last summer with a better than expected report on Lesvos.
Edit: Yiannis Baboulias was involved in this which may explain why it was surprisingly good.
Amnesty report on detention
Amnesty report on detention and deportation of refugees in Turkey.
In Greek Meeting in Exarcheia
In Greek
Meeting in Exarcheia at the weekend - panhellenic network of anti-racist, anti-fascist, solidarity and migrant/refugee associations.
Soli Cafe wrote: In Vial, in
[quote=Soli Cafe]
In Vial, in the hillside of Chios, far from the touristy shore, a so called Refugee Hotspot is being built. It is obvious, that this place will fail to respond to the immigration of people fleeing war, persecution or poverty in a humanitarian way. The camp will restrict all chances for self-sufficiency of the migrants, being far from shops or supermarkets and public. Furthermore, a big part of the camp is already fenced in. It is likely to assume that people, who look for shelter, will be imprisoned, hold as criminals and deported from there.
Officials announced, that this detention center could be opened in two weeks. How will this change the support, that we as local and international volunteers and activists can provide to migrants on Chios? In order to discuss this question and the possibilities of a protest action against the Hotspot, you are invited to a meeting at Friday, the 12th of February at 11 am at the Soli Cafe. Feel welcomed to join in!
[/quote]
[quote=Philippa Kempson]
Please share widely among any volunteers and organisations currently active or present in Lesvos.
**RE: Information Meeting on the Targeting of Volunteers and the Identification of Legal Responses Towards it. **
....
Οn Saturday 02/13/2016 the Greek Action for Human Rights - "Pleiades" will host an informative meeting on "The announced recording, monitoring, coordination and supervision of volunteer services of individuals and entities in the perspective of the UN Convention for the protection of human rights defenders" with Electra Leda Koutra, Human Rights lawyer from Athens.
The event will take place in the hall of the Bar Association of Mytilene, which is located inside the building of the Court of Mytilene. The briefing will be followed by a discussion that will help identify responses towards the escalating targeting of volunteers and those who defend human rights.
....
[/quote]
Germany sends NATO warships
Germany sends NATO warships to patrol with Frontex in the Aegean.
[quote=Faloulah]
Wanna see how #refugeesGR death toll will rise? Wait till NATO deploys twitter.com/asteris
[/quote]
[quote=Damomac]
In welcoming #Nato intervention, #Syriza partner #Kammenos says #Greece is closing "chapter of illegal immigration". No mention of refugees.
#Syriza coalition partner Kammenos welcomes #Nato decision: "arrested immigrants will be sent straight back to Turkey".
[/quote]
Kammenos is minister of defence in the Syriza/ANEL (Independent Greeks) coalition government. Initially this appointment may have looked like giving the leader of Syriza's right wing nationalist coalition partner a chance to play soldiers without it having much wider significance. With the Greek military taking over responsibility for managing the refugee crisis it's starting to look more disturbing. For a reminder about Kammenos, the Independent Greeks and the coalition see this article by Irate Greek written just after last January's elections.
Irate Greek
Edit:
Π. Καμμένος για συμφωνία ΝΑΤΟ: Κλείνει το κεφάλαιο της παράνομης μετανάστευσης
Platanos Refugee Solidarity
[quote=Platanos Refugee Solidarity]
The situation in Lesvos has changed radically the last 10 days. New Frontex vessels appeared and together with the greek coastguard are barricading the sea the whole day. Very few refugees reach the shore cause most of them are being stopped by the authorities who take everyone on board and send them directly to Mytilene, Molyvos or Petra and then to the registration camp in Moria. In that way, no support from the frontline camps can be offered to these people, leading them to spend many hours without food, clothes and medical attention.
Platanos sea rescue team was stopped several times from providing help or guidance to refugee boats and we were ordered to back away.
In some cases the refugees had to wait for over an hour in the middle of the sea for the bigger frontex ships to arrive and pick them up.
[/quote]
From the comments below that post:
Platanos Refugee Solidarity
EU 'recommendations' to
EU 'recommendations' to Greece on managing its borders
Spiegel - Closing the Balkan route: will Greece become a refugee bottleneck?
Chris wrote: In port of
[quote=Chris]
In port of Samos the camp is broken and moved to mountains by military. I was forced to "leave the harbor". https://twitter.com/martingommel/status/697761543627399172
[/quote]
In Greek Soldiers refusing to
In Greek
Soldiers refusing to take part in construction of 'concentration camps'
Νίκη φαντάρων που αρνήθηκαν να πάνε στα hot spot-στρατοπεδα συγκέντρωσης: κόπηκαν οι αποσπάσεις τους
Damomac wrote: Safe
[quote=Damomac]
Safe corridors through the Nato patrols which the Syriza/Anel government has approved? https://twitter.com/dgatopoulos/status/698078237575028736
[/quote]
Mark, thank you so much for
Mark, thank you so much for your diligent posting on this thread. Really excellent and vital work. I have poured through every single entry and am half way through writing an article on the subject, while liasing with volunteers on the ground. Will post here once it's published, and would welcome any more info/comment from you or anyone else in the meantime. You can check out some of my work from Greece here:
http://mariennapw.com/category/articles/refugee-crisis/
Thanks Mya, I've sent you a
Thanks Mya, I've sent you a pm. I'll look forward to reading your article. As I'm only following events from the UK I probably don't have so much to add to what's already on the thread. One thing I haven't mentioned though is the Golden Dawn mobilisation against the building of the hotspot in Kos, and against the planned camps in Athens and Thessaloniki. On Kos this also reflects the anti-refugee attitudes of the mayor, who is reportedly planning to hold a local referendum on the issue. One difference between Kos and the other islands (Rhodes is the only other one) is that it still has a Muslim minority that escaped the 1923 population exchange because of the Italian occupation of the Dodecanese. I've wondered if there's a link here between local issues and anti-refugee feeling. I'm not sure about this though and I could be on the wrong track. In any case the possibility of an ugly racist response is always there. If, as seems likely, hundreds of thousands of refugees are left stranded in Greece as the borders close then this could become a real issue.
Edit: Statement on the situation in Kos from Kos Solidarity (in Greek)
It's off topic but farmers
It's off topic but farmers are protesting against changes to the pension system today with a camp in Syntagma and clashes with the MAT. Here's a picture of a tractor outside the Vouli with flags of Marinos Antypas.
Seizure of refugees'
Seizure of refugees' documents by Macedonian authorities
New Greek law to include
New Greek law to include detention regime in ‘hotspots’
Zoe Gardner - Stepping in to
Zoe Gardner - Stepping in to plug the gaps: the role of volunteers in the European humanitarian crisis
‘We know what it means to be
‘We know what it means to be a refugee,’ say Lesvos grandmothers
hands on: volunteering with
hands on: volunteering with the refugee crisis - blog from a volunteer at Moria
Quote: NATO has launched
source
Mouzalas posing for photos on
Mouzalas posing for photos on Lesvos in a life jacket.
[quote=Anthony Verias]
"We live in an age where citizens find solutions while politicians make symbolic protests"
https://twitter.com/mpaountolino/status/698952303756361733
[/quote]
8 σημεία για τη Λέσβο ...και
8 σημεία για τη Λέσβο ...και το προσφυγικό ζήτημα
Alarm Phone - Open Letter:
Alarm Phone - Open Letter: Against sensationalist and undignified practices by volunteers and journalists
No Borders wrote: #Leros
[quote=No Borders]
#Leros Pikpa shelter for #refugeesGr in danger to close so hotspot opens. The most interesting story for a journalist to search
Though solidarity invested huge amounts (90.000) on creating a shelter at #Leros & give it to state as registration center...
... state prefers to turn into a hot spot an area with black history; A psychiatric asylum known for human rights violations...
...where 200 patients are still detained. So that #refugeesGr arriving, are away from solidarity or sight. Behind fences. All for profits.
Case of #Leros is no1 example of militarization of #RefugeeCrisis . + solidarity faced as problem 4those who make profits out of #refugeesGr
[/quote]
More about Pikpa here
The hot spots are supposed to up and running this week
The situation on Samos
Criminalising solidarity:
Criminalising solidarity: when helping refugees becomes a risk
Zoe Mavroudi wrote: 4
[quote=Zoe Mavroudi]
4 refugee "hotspots" complete, ordered by the EU under threat of Schengen expulsion. Syriza once again an enabler. Next up:mass deportations
The EU "hotspot" is, essentially, the place where authorities will decide whether to send people back to death or abject poverty.
Refugees 2b sorted out inside new Greek "hotspots". No clear EU policy of who or when will receive the "good" ones. As for the "bad",oh well
[/quote]
The new hotspot on Chios
The new hotspot on Chios ----- drone video ----- report in Greek
Platanos Refugee Solidarity
[quote=Platanos Refugee Solidarity]
The refugees that arrived yesterday at Platanos Camp, were soaking wet and in shock, because as they explained to us, the Turkish coastguard tried to force them to return to the Turkish coast with the use of threats, by creating artificial waves and by the extensive use of water cannons. Two of the boats returned to the Turkish coast with all the passengers in shock. The remaining two boats managed to break through and reached Skala Sykamias, Lesvos.
Today at 3 o'clock in the morning, the Greek Coastguard attempts to stop a new boat from reaching the coast at Skala Sykamia resulted in a havoc and the boat almost crashed on sharp rocks. The accident was prevented at the last moment by the intervention of the rescue boat belonging to the team 'Sea Rescue'.
This morning: Turkish coastguard was sighted from the 'Korakas' Observation Post to repeat its deliberate attacks to boats in the middle of the sea, again by the use of water cannons.
[/quote]
The use of water cannons in winter temperatures is extremely dangerous. Hypothermia is a risk in any case with overcrowded dinghies taking on water on night crossings. This led to the death of a five year old boy from Afghanistan on a boat to Chios on Tuesday. This isn't the only case of children dying of hypothermia on boats that made it across without sinking.
In Greek - 'Solidarity vs
In Greek - 'Solidarity vs Intolerance'
Αλληλεγγύη vs Μισαλλοδοξία
Posted on facebook a couple
Posted on facebook a couple of hours ago
[quote=Platanos Refugee Solidarity]
Urgent- Spread out!
Greek police gave a deadline of 1 hour to No Border kitchen camp in Lesvos to leave, otherwise they will remove them by force. People needed in Tsamakia Mytilene now
[/quote]
Edit: some updates
[quote=The Hope Centre, Elpis]
We stand in solidarity and support with our friends No Borders Kitchen in Mytilene who have been given one hours notice by police to shut down. They are human rights defenders providing food to the hungry. International law supports what they do, humanity supports what they do, we support what they do. We must all be strong together for refugees. If you are in Mytilene, or can get there, please go and show support
[/quote]
[quote=Doc Provocateur]
People in solidarity w @noborderkitchen gathered @ Tsamakia beach after eviction threats by cops
#refugeesgr https://twitter.com/redswallow23/status/700729746443776000
[/quote]
[quote=NoBorderKitchen]
#NoBorderKitchen was threatened with eviction tonight. Many people r wih us, we re discussing the situation. More soon.
[/quote]
[quote=Thomas Mavrofides]
@blacktom1961 any news about the eviction threats?
@refugee_supp no news yet, the cops seem to reconsider their stance, although nothing is certain. No cops on site at the time though.
@refugee_supp it seems that there's a pressure put onto the cops, by the local municipality that supports the NGOs (and their subsidies...)
[/quote]
The hotspot on Chios - for
The hotspot on Chios - for now only being used for refugee registration as food provision for refugees depends on volunteers who are refusing to be registered and so aren't allowed in. That hotspots are in place doesn't mean they are workable or that they can cope with the numbers of refugees. An obvious problem is what happens to people detained for deportation if Turkey drags its feet on accepting them. When this happens it won't take long for camps to fill up.
[quote=Theurgia Goetia]
Οι πρόσφυγες πάνε στο Hot Spot μόνο για καταγραφή.
Δεν έχει λυθεί το θέμα της σίτισης.
*Χωρίς αλληλέγγυους δουλειά δε γίνεται..
So,#refugeesgr can't live into #Chios HotSpot 'cause nobody distribute food there.The social kitchen of the ppl in solidarity is NOT allowed
>b/c the locals don't accept to be registered (they are not an NGO).
The #refugeesGr in #Chios are still living into the old camp at Souda (near the port).
[/quote]
Chios hotspot protest
Chios hotspot protest
Reports of Afghans no longer
Reports of Afghans no longer being allowed to cross into Macedonia
Live Ticker Eidomeni
[quote=Live Ticker Eidomeni]
21.02.16
On the 20th of February the police authorities of the states making up the ‘humanitarian corridor’ introduced a single biometric registration document for refugees wanting to enter the corridor. This document is now being issued at one single point on the whole route – the Greek-Macedonian/FYROM border – restricting and controlling the access to the corridor even further. Additionally, it is only being given to the people who can present a valid passport or ID.
As a result of this new policy, chaos has unfolded at numerous border crossings where people have become stuck in an administrative no man’s land. 617 Afghans remain stuck in Tabanovce, Macedonia at the time of writing. Whilst in Dimitrovgrad, on the night of the 20th of February a group of 40 people were denied registration papers by the Serbian authorities. They took a bus to Presevo were they were again refused. They then travelled to Sid, with no papers or passports: it is unclear how these cases are going to be dealt with now on the route. The new measures are certainly designed to criminalise and banish access to the corridor to those arriving from any other point than Idomeni.
At the Greek-Macedonian/FYROM border police have started narrowing down even further the nationalities who are able to enter the corridor as Afghanis have been removed from the nationalities allowed to travel onwards. Now, only Syrians and Iraqis are being issued the new travel document. In the joint statement released after the press conference of the police chiefs of Austria and the Balkan countries, only Syria and Iraq are mentioned as examples of provenance countries for refugees deemed worthy of international protection. This points towards an explanation to the new racist and illegal segregation which is being implemented at the entry to the corridor.
It remains to be seen now, how such implementations can effectively be held out in the next few days. With new arrivals at the islands higher than they have been in the past days and Afghanis constituting a large number of these, it can be predicted that large amounts of people – including many families with young children – will become stuck at the northern border of Greece. We expect the struggle against these racist and illegal measures to start very soon.
[/quote]
Edit: Serbia 'denying entry' to Afghan refugees
Platanos Refugee Solidarity
[quote=Platanos Refugee Solidarity]
Update from the "No Border Kitchen" camp in Mytilene. Everything is all right at the moment. The police didn't show up. The mayor is denying his involvement to evacuate the camp. People from the "Self-organized camp of Platanos" and from the "Solidarity initiative of Lesvos" gathered for 2 days at the camp to stand in solidarity with those who have repeatedly been intimidated by the authorities for the "crime" of offering food and support to immigrants.
[/quote]
Statewatch: NGOs and
Statewatch: NGOs and volunteers helping refugees in Greece to be placed under state control
Joint statement from heads of
Joint statement from heads of police in Austria, Slovenia, Croatia, Serbia and Macedonia
Reports that Turkey won't accept return of refugees picked up by NATO ships
Thousands of Afghans stranded in Greece as Macedonia shuts border
Idomeni today - Afghans
Idomeni today - Afghans forcibly removed and put on buses back to Thessaloniki and Athens. This looks like the start of a new phase in the crisis with arrivals increasing on the islands while only Syrians and Iraqis with the correct documents are allowed to travel on, leaving other nationalities stranded in Greece.
Afghan refugees turned away at Europe's doorstep
AJE video
'There was lots of crying as Afghan families were separated and put on buses'
Declaration from today's
Declaration from today's Austria and Balkan states meeting
Meet the heroic Greeks rescuing the refugees the EU has abandoned
Kia Mistilis
[quote=Manos Moschopoulos]
16-22 Feb: 21593 #refugeesGr arrived at Greek islands, only 4598 allowed to cross to #Macedonia. #Refugees are now stranded all over Greece.
[/quote]
[quote=Sarianna Nikkola]
Military camp Anagnostopoulos turned into a "hotspot" for #refugeesGR opened this morning in #Diavata North Greece. https://twitter.com/seleogr/status/702456092698148864
[/quote]
[quote=Teacher Dude]
100s of #refugees being sent to Diavata, Thessaloniki. Volunteer groups struggling to provide aid
Just dropped off supplies at Diavata camp. Thessaloniki. 1000s of #refugees from Iraq, Syria, there. Strong police presence
[/quote]
Video: refugees arriving at Diavata camp
Video: refugees in Plateia Victorias, Athens
Photo: refugees in the rain, Plateia Victorias
Λαμία: Οι ντόπιοι βγαίνουν
Λαμία: Οι ντόπιοι βγαίνουν από τα σπίτια τους και βοηθούν τους πρόσφυγες
Ανταπόκριση φαντάρων από την 34η ταξιαρχία στην Άσσυρο για την κατάσταση των εγκαταστάσεων στο hotspot στα Διαβατά
Europe braces for major
Europe braces for major 'humanitarian crisis' in Greece after row over refugees
Two refugees try to hang themselves in Plateia Victorias --- edit: report here
In Athens, thousands of Afghan refugees are living in public parks as their path north is blocked
Radio interview with a volunteer back from Lesvos
Ferries taking refugees from the islands halted until port at Piraeus is cleared
Thousands of refugees are stuck at Piraeus with nowhere to go. Kammenos has announced that five new camps are being set up, I think all at former army camps. Many refugees in northern Greece have set out walking towards Idomeni along the main roads.
[quote=MSF Sea]
Greek media are reporting that camps for 20,000 #people will be built in northern #Greece before the EU-Turkey summit on March 7.
[/quote]
[quote=Andrew Connelly]
There are multiple exoduses of #refugees all across #Greece heading to a border that is barely open twitter.com/tempodiaframma
#Greece #Macedonia border getting bad fast. Driving out of #Idomeni, the road to the highway full of hundreds of #refugees walking, sleeping
[/quote]
[quote=Asteris Masouras]
Call for aid to infants at #Diavata by @eleannioannidou facebook.com/eleanna.ioannidou "army & UNHCR didn't provide for their nutritional needs"
@asteris @eleannioannidou I wouldn't really expect the army to be supplied to take care of babies, but you'd think the UNHCR would.
@warmwelcomeeu I'm sure not gonna pull any punches on these things, things are dire. Eleanna's a friend & veteran activist, I trust her word
@asteris Oh I believe it, I'm just griping about UNHCR.
P.S.: docs.google.com/spreadsheets
@warmwelcomeeu I'll be griping about it a lot too, if this keeps up. More army/UNHCR-operated camps will be opening up in coming days
[/quote]
Daphne Tolis wrote: Greek
[quote=Daphne Tolis]
Greek Shipping Min. announced plan to slow down transfer of refugees from the islands by suspending ferry services from Lesbos, Chios&Samos.
Ferries in Lesbos, Chios & Samos will house registered #refugees from today until Sunday and will then resume services, acc to the minister.
[/quote]
[quote=Andrew Connelly]
Yesterday UNHCR say #Macedonia let 107 #refugees enter. There must be over 4000 here and rising #Idomeni
At #Greece/#Macedonia border many fled #Syria v.recently. Fleeing: shelling by #Turkey in Afrin, #Russia/Assad in Aleppo, ISIS in Raqqa...
BREAKING: #Slovenia, #Croatia announce entry limit of 500 #refugees per day, according to #Serbia interior minister
My latest @AJEnglish report with @zolinphoto from the #Greece #Macedonia border on the plight of banished Afghans http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/2016/02/europe-closing-borders-afghans-160225151702251.html
[/quote]
Report from yesterday Live
Report from yesterday
[quote=Live Ticker Eidomeni]
The situation in northern Greece has changed in an almost unprecedented way. According to MSF, 12 000 refugees are currently stuck in Greece. They want to travel on and their immediate goal is to be as close to the border as possible. Today has shown, that the Greek government’s strategy to split up groups of refugees and lock them up in different camps along the way does not work. In northern Greece, thousands have started to walk towards the border: that is, Idomeni. The whole region seems to be on the move.
Hundreds stuck in the newly inaugurated former military camp in Diavata near Thessaloniki broke the fence today and started to walk towards Idomeni (70km). The camp in Diavata is completely closed off by police and military. No NGOs, no media and of course, no independent people were allowed to enter the camp. Also, no one was allowed to exit. However, the refugees could not be restrained by police, military and fences. They forged a way out and moved on, northbound.
In the meantime, those stuck at the Polykastro gas station decided to walk to Idomeni as well. Around 800 people were on the highway towards Idomeni this afternoon. There were further unconfirmed reports about other spots along the way, where people decided to walk.
Meanwhile, the camp in Idomeni is overcrowded. According to the UNHCR statistics of today, no one has been able to cross from Macedonia onwards. Macedonia, in accordance with the other Balkan route northern states and Austria, have declared mores thorough identity checks. This will mean further slowing of the registration processes and travelling speed of the refugees.
Whilst the camp in Idomeni remains overcrowded, protests and escalations can be expected there in the coming days. And as the recent developments have shown, thousands more can be expected to continue their journey onwards on foot along the highway towards Idomeni. The sight of hundreds walking along the highway are impressive and evoke the images of Keleti, Hungary in September 2015. They show the will of the refugees to reach the border and travel on. Once more, the different governments have made their plans without considering the agency and determination of the people on the move.
We have decided to change the format of our liveticker, in order to better accommodate the fast-pace changes happening simultaneously in many different locations in northern Greece. The several newly opened spots where people will be held back in the region around Thessaloniki as well as the highway from Athens now widen the geographical range from where people are setting off on foot, revolting and protesting. From now on, we will write one update per day in the evening, which will summarize the different events that occurred during the day between Thessalonki and the border in Idomeni. Short updates can be found during the day on our Twitter account: https://twitter.com/MovingEurope
[/quote]
Benjamin Julian reports from
Benjamin Julian reports from Kastellorizo
Welcome to Greece (but not to Europe) --- edit: a comment on this
Live Ticker Eidomeni
[quote=Live Ticker Eidomeni]
26.02.2016
The situation in Greece is further intensifying. Today again, people started to walk from Polykastro, Diavata and even further south towards Idomeni.
This morning the last ferry arrived from Lesvos before the temporary stop of transport from the islands to Piraeus port. The Greek authorities announced that ferries will be held back on the islands and used as temporary accommodation. Apart from the overcrowded camps close to the port there are also several hundred people accommodated in the ferry terminals of Piraeus. The people have been there for up to 3 days, staying on cardboard in the terminal halls.
Around 150 people started a sit-in protest at the entrance of the port, demanding on a banner „We want to go out of Greece“.
Meanwhile, the Slovenian authorities have announced to limit the daily influx of people to only 580 per day. The countries south on the Balkan corridor are expected to follow. With only 168 people passing to Macedonia/FYROM yesterday, according to the UNHCR statistics, the bottleneck in Idomeni is not expected to clear up soon.
With heavy rain this evening, the situation in the overcrowded and muddy camp in Idomeni, where many go without tents, is becoming worse. Rising tensions among the people who have been stuck in the camp now for days can be expected.
[/quote]
Marianna Karakoulaki
[quote=Marianna Karakoulaki]
Two former military camps that were supposed to become #RefugeesGR hotspots on fire in northern Greece. Rumours that fascists burnt them.
[/quote]
Report in Greek
Los Muros de Europa - Spanish
Los Muros de Europa - Spanish produced documentary about the refugee crisis on Lesvos. It includes some interviews in Spanish but a lot of it is in English
Yesterday Live Ticker
Yesterday
[quote=Live Ticker Eidomeni]
28.2.2016
This morning, another big protest took place in Idomeni. Around 400 people blocked the train tracks during the entire day, keeping cargo trains from crossing the border. The police intended to blackmail the protesters by stating that they would open the border if they left the train tracks. However, for the protesters it was clear: “They are lying to us! They say that the border will open, but nobody passed today and yesterday only 50 people passed. They are lying to us!”
The situation is getting tenser; people are questioning whether they will ever be able to pass this border. Many have figured out that the small number of people passing is a strategy of the authorities: “They only let some people pass to keep our hopes up, to keep us waiting calmly.”
There have been new camps opening in the surrounding area of Polykastro, where reportedly the few remaining people from the gas station in Polykastro have been taken. However, it has also been reported that these camps are not really ready to accommodate the said 2000 people. Whether the authorities’ containment strategy works with this camp remains to be seen. Possibly, many will make their way to the border in the next days anyways.
Meanwhile, the camp in Idomeni is extending steadily across the surrounding fields. More people keep arriving, on foot and with taxis. All day long there has been a steady trickle of new people, packed with their heavy bags, blankets and small children in their arms. They try to find their way around the already overcrowded camp, hoping to find a tent and a spot to set it up. The number of people exceeds the camp capacity by at least a fourfold. It is only a matter of time until the daily protests become no longer appeasable.
[/quote]
.
Today
[quote=Marianna Karakoulaki]
More than 8000 #refugeesGR in the camp today. #Idomeni
....
Police blockade just broke 1000s #refugeesgr head to the border to protest. Calm at the moment
Chaos at the the border. #refugeesGR to break the fence! They want safe passage - some have been trapped for days
Macedonian police/army have placed barricades as fenced door opened for a bit. 1000s in front of the fence. Train line closed.
Macedonian police just teargassed us. NOT on the air - directly to #refugeesGr !!! Loads of children teargassed !
[/quote]
[quote=MSF Sea]
BREAKING: The #FYROM authorities have just used tear gas on the protesting #people waiting to cross the border which includes many children.
UPDATE: The @MSF medical teams in #Idomeni are treating child after child for exposure to tear gas.
[/quote]
Update from Life on the
Update from Life on the ground in Lesvos
Damomac wrote: Greece's
[quote=Damomac]
Greece's migration minister says TV and journalists will not be given access to refugee centres until further notice
[/quote]
[quote=Teacher Dude]
Greek government forbids media access to refugee camps on order of #SYRIZA minister
....
Now at meeting. Volunteer groups from Thessaloniki coordinating efforts to help #refugees in city and #Idomeni These guys get things done.
Lots of groups and individuals want to help at Diavata refugee camp in Thessaloniki, people trying to coordinate efforts
Lots of other refugee camps opening up across northern Greece. Local communities trying to help #refugees
[/quote]
Marianna Karakoulaki's report
Marianna Karakoulaki's report from Idomeni
Kastellorizo - clothes
Kastellorizo - clothes distribution centre burnt down last night
Athens - building occupied at the Polytechnic to house refugee families camped out in Plateia Victorias
Nick Barnets wrote: Reports
[quote=Nick Barnets]
Reports of 10,000 #refugees at #Idomeni now and many heading there on foot today.
A few of the #refugees I met in #Idomeni tell me they've been stranded there for 10 days.
Most are #SyrianRefugees. By what I've observed more than half are women/children.
[/quote]
[quote=Daniel Trilling]
Trapping refugees in Greece, as is happening now, may slow the passage of people to north-west Europe, but it's unlikely to stop them coming
A few reasons why: 1. Refugees keep moving until they find somewhere they are confident they can settle - Turkey is not that place.
2. Regardless of the way it's being treated, Greece is still in the EU and many refugees will have an expectation of fairer treatment.
3. "Dublin system" returns to Greece have been suspended since 2011, so if refugees can pass further into EU, they won't be sent back.
4. The Balkan borders will be closed, but this means refugees will go back to using smuggler routes, as they did before summer 2015.
5. Despite much-vaunted negotiations with Turkey, my guess is it's unlikely large numbers of refugees will be sent back there.
(Because a) what's in it for Turkey, b) conditions in Turkey often don't meet EU standards, so the policy could be open to legal challenge)
So, the likely effects are going to be i) humanitarian crisis in Greece ii) refugees taking slower, more expensive, more dangerous journeys
and iii) a containment plan, where people are put into temporary-seeming camps that become large, poorly-run holding centres
This is pretty much what happened in Greece on a smaller scale from 2008-2014. Can't see any political will from the EU to do different now.
[/quote]
Don't know, don't care - how Afghans won't be deterred by Europe's border restrictions
Asteris Masouras wrote: The
[quote=Asteris Masouras]
The Syriza govt issued a media ban on refugee centers, claiming coordinators asked for it. @UNHCRGreece & the army? http://apne.ws/1OIqifP
....
True, but I'm also wondering if UNHCR requested the media ban at refugee reception centers https://twitter.com/KatalystProds/status/704744068857929729
@asteris any reason you wonder this?
@keeptalkingGR govt claims coordinators asked for it … army & UNHCR are coordinating response at the camps
@asteris i see. i thought it was rather the army
@keeptalkingGR I bet the army would prefer to permanently ban the media. Also, read this https://twitter.com/northaura/status/704404044060688384
....
"At Piraeus today, coast guard cop demanded I stop filming, while private media are filming unperturbed" https://twitter.com/kinimatini/status/704717207587168256
The media ban only hurts independent reports, the ones actually showing the reality on the ground" https://twitter.com/kinimatini/status/704717734123278336
Volunteers protest abusive mainstream media at refugee centers, state bans media from centers, mainstream media keep filming
[/quote]
Benjamin Julian wrote: The
[quote=Benjamin Julian]
The hotspot in Leros is a badly run prison
On Friday, a hotspot was opened in Leros for incoming migrants. What is a hotspot, you might well ask, and there are many possible answers: An identification factory for migrants. A prison. A refugee camp run by the police and military, enclosed in barbed wire. An Empire of Identification. Everyone gets registered here: migrants, workers, NGOs and volunteers. Everything in it is square; the paper forms, the people-containers, the walkways and the wire mesh.
There are three camps already on Leros, with humane staff, proper facilities, varied activities and open doors. This does not suit the border regime of Europe. For months it has demanded of the Greek government, and twisted its arm relentlessly, so that it finally builds hotspots. And now they’re here, in all their horrifying glory. Shining metal, immaculate concrete, white gravel and rows of square boxes for The Anonymous Unidentified to stay in until they get their papers and can finally have an actual verified existence in the merciless eyes of the European Union. Unless they’re of the wrong nationality, in which case they’ll get no papers, except for a ticket back to Wherever. Getting papers takes three days, but nobody knows how long one has to wait for deportation.
On the day the hotspot opened, no volunteer or NGO was alerted. They just got a random call a good while after the first arrivals, saying that baby milk was needed. Volunteers immediately came over, and there the refugees sat, huddled in blankets on the concrete floor of the camp entrance. That is where newcomers are made to wait while, one after the other, the human beings are digitized and fingerprinted, their bodies are transformed into verifiable, printable, transferable identities.
The refugees asked if anyone had brought water. It turned out the army had given them a little to drink in plastic cups, but when a few people threw them on the ground, instead of in the garbage can, the army gave them no more.
Talking with refugees was forbidden. “Find out what they need and go,” the men in uniform said. That is how an camp under the police and military operates. The rules are made on the fly by a man in uniform, habitually on a soaring power-trip, maybe even wearing blue-mirror sunglasses in addition to the uniform to underline his privileged anonymity in this dictatorship of identification. Volunteers that try to help here without having registered risk being interrogated about their purpose and threatened with imprisonment. (This is no idle fantasy, it actually happened.) Western volunteers often feel ashamed about their privileges over refugees. Here, the migrant-hating machine of Europe has finally and accidentally created some twisted sort of equality.
What it has not created is a functioning processing facility. The shivering new arrivals on Friday were not supplied with food or clothes, medicine, information, doctors or legal aid. Nothing. The reception they got was as cold and stark as the concrete they sat on. The military seems to just expect volunteers to do their bidding, to feed and clothe their prisoners.
And so we did.
This is what volunteering has come to. Shipping meals into prisons so that the Greek military doesn’t have to cook them. And it gets worse. The uniformed masters of the camp have told us that we have to collect the garbage as well.
We can’t be codependent like this. Today we clean up the prison and feed the prisoners, because the military can’t be bothered. What will humanitarian work look like tomorrow?
We should have been prepared for this. These hotspots have been planned openly and publicly for months. They’re already being used to horrible effect in Italy, where MSF has withdrawn its cooperation due to “unacceptable conditions”. We should take the same stand here. There is a risk that the state will then starve people for a while, but if we fold and allow these hotspots to just carry on with our assistance, things won’t get any better. These places may look like an excel document come to life, a registration form built of concrete, but they are in reality chaotically and incompetently run arbitrary dictatorships of the least compassionate institutions in society. We can’t do humanitarian work there any more than a kitten can play in a rottweiler cage. Compassionate people will be bullied out or coaxed into complicity. We’re already the crutches of a spiteful, savage institution that has no humanitarian purpose. Let’s draw a line and stop our cooperation.
[/quote]
NoBorders
[quote=NoBorders]
Meanwhile,we forget detained immigrants. Deportations to Turkey from Greece. It's horrible.
308 deportations from #Greece in 2 days for nationality, from detention centers
[/quote]
[quote=Refugee Support]
No more registration for Pakistani refugees in GR. Thus impossible to buy ferry ticket, stuck on islands #refugeesGr https://twitter.com/bjokie/status/704321063858130944
Just like refugees from Morocco and Algeria. Question now is if they will be detained as well in detention camps like #Corinth.
....
#Deportation of #refugees from #Corinth detention center started yesterday. Corinth almost empty now.
According to reports only those who were able to register as a refugee on the islands won't be deported.
The registration was closed for Moroccan and Algerian refugees end of last year.
[/quote]
Greece seeks EU aid for
Greece seeks EU aid for 100,000 refugees
Good thread Mark, keep us
Good thread Mark, keep us posted
This story is so sad..What's
This story is so sad..What's happening??..
Video - collection for
Video - collection for refugees in Syntagma today
Working class solidarity with
Working class solidarity with refugees and migrants - statement from libertarian student groups
Samos Refugees wrote: Stuck
[quote=Samos Refugees]
Stuck on Samos
Over the past month we have spent some time in travelling on planes and in airports. These are places which are far removed from the realities of the refugees we know and meet on Samos. Airports and passenger planes assume and portray a world of freedom to roam. Posters and magazines suggest the world as an open space to explore and enjoy (if you have the money). You will see no warning messages on the bill boards which encourage you to spend time in London, Rome or Paris that only people with the 'right' papers/passports/visas will be allowed to enter. Most of the passengers in these places never question their right to travel freely. It is taken for granted.
But this is a world apart from the realities confronting refugees in places such as Samos. For most of them the world is becoming smaller day by day.
The authorities have been busy in the past month trying, under massive EU pressure and threats, to get the hotspot up and running by a mid February deadline. It is located next to the existing Detention Centre on the hillside above Samos town. If it resembles its neighbour it is set to be another cage. It was of course a ridiculous target: to provide the infrastructure for and build adequate accommodation for up to 2,000 people in a matter of weeks in a ruined country where the authorities are by and large incompetent and on an island whose leaders have, from the beginning, made clear their reluctance to provide anything for refugees. So of course the hotspot is not finished, or at least the buildings are not; the refugees, however, have been moved, and crowded into cabins and two-man tents set on concrete in and around the old detention centre where they are fingerprinted, questioned and processed. At least for Europe this is what probably counts more.
The local elites on the island, both political and economic, have from the beginning made clear that they did not want refugees on Samos; for them, this spelt disaster for an already fragile tourist industry. It was a stupid argument, but was fed by stories of refugees as carriers of disease, thieves, and now of course terrorists. We and others trying to do something over the past year found ourselves constantly obstructed and frustrated, because to provide anything, however minimal, to refugees was argued by some as an encouragement for more to come. They came anyway.
Despite the opposition of the local authorities and elites to the creation of the hotspot, they have little leverage on policies made far beyond their reach in Berlin and Brussels. The hotspot also signifies that the refugees can no longer be seen as a short term inconvenience but something that is now a fixed feature of Samos life. Refugees on Samos is now one of our realities, over which the island has no control and which is determined by its geography and the politics of borders. It is a reality that the island authorities are reluctant to embrace. For them the presence of refugees and the Camps in which they are held deters tourism. It is that simple. These same authorities NEVER comment that it is the deaths in the Aegean – which requires a different sort of solution – which might be the biggest deterrent to tourists; after all who wants to swim in a graveyard, even when it is azure blue? Nobody we know here now looks upon the sea in the same way as they did before.
Incidentally why don't they listen to the restaurant owner in Lampedusa who said that what harmed tourism in his town was not the presence of refugees but the militarised response of the authorities. Tourists can't relax in the bars and eating places with so many uniforms and guns around them.
As far as the Samian authorities are concerned there are only negatives associated with the arrival and presence of refugees. There is never any acknowledgement that the refugees and its associated caravan of NGOs and international volunteers have brought income and jobs to the island, and through the winter too. Restaurants, cafes, supermarkets, hotels and not least taxi drivers amongst others have all benefited significantly from the refugees this winter when there are no tourists on the island. And with the hotspot developments now taking place and additional EU cash to be made available over the next 2 years (700 million euros in total for Greece) we can expect to see job creation at a level on the island not seen since the crisis began six years ago.
In every aspect of the ongoing and ever shifting reactions of the European authorities to the on going flow of refugees to the Greek islands the voices of the refugees is absent. Of course nobody has asked the refugees what they regard as being important in the creation of the new camp. We have no idea now whether Samos is going to be a place where refugees are held for months or just for weeks. But whatever the length, lines of cabins crowded together up a Samos hillside surrounded by barbed wire fences could never be described as welcoming and safe.
Listen to the refugees and you seen realise how having your life on hold and depending entirely on others for everything eats away at your well-being. In particular many of the refugees are rightly angry and upset about the lack of information. This extends to never knowing how long they are going to have to wait to be processed and allowed to move on to other parts of Greece. Many of the younger refugees under 18 who are not traveling with their families, but often with friends of a similar age find themselves being held back without any information as to what is to happen next.
For the north Africans who are detained in the police cells (there are others in the camp, but there are not enough cells to lock up all the Algerians and Moroccans) it is even more agonising. They are told nothing. But the police know that after around 20 to 30 days they will be taken under escort to Athens and then on to a closed detention centre for up to 3 months pending deportation. According to one activist who regularly visits the cells, the police consciously avoid giving any information as it is so depressing that it could lead to disturbances with the detainees. Moreover when any information is given it is often unreliable. So for example last week it was announced that there would be no refugees allowed on the ferries to Athens due to the conditions there. The next day over 400 refugees left on the ferry to Piraeus.
Such has been the story all along: decisions are made, then overturned, ignored or forgotten; the unreliability of information means that confusion and frustration is inevitable. Initially it was announced that the hotspot would be created at the port. But within 6 months its offices, sleeping cabins, showers, and so forth are all being dismantled. In February it was announced that the feeding, clothing and care of the refugees was now – with much publicity and applause- going to be taken over by the Church. An institution which on Samos at least has been conspicuous by its absence in helping refugees. MSF (Doctors Without Borders) who had finally managed to overcome official hostility and reluctance and begun providing one meal a day were told to stop what they were doing. As a consequence MSF announced that given the new arrangement they would cease being a major food provider. But the Church came from Athens, reputedly distributed some bread and tinned tuna and left. It seems that it is not ready! Why and by whom was it decided to replace something working reasonably well with something untested and unprepared? In the end, as on many occasions, it was left for others to provide a solution, in this case the Open Eyes kitchen teams at the port and in the camp, who cook and provide food for free.
Meanwhile, as always, the fall-out of the inadequacy, incompetence and lack of humanity of the official response lands on the refugees themselves. The lack of information and the unreliability of what they are told reinforces the despair of dependency on authorities that don't fundamentally care for them. It's scary. They can't plan for the next hour let alone the next day. They never know when their name is going to be called over the tannoy to come to the office, so they have to hang around. Doing nothing. There is no school. There are no places to sit, have a coffee, a game. There is no bulletin board letting them know the latest news on the border closures. But their sense of being blocked and of having fewer opportunities to travel on is profound as is the awareness that it is going to get worse which makes being stuck on Samos even more intolerable. One of the most common questions we are asked by the newly arriving refugees is what news we have on the borders – what are closed, what restrictions are being applied and so on. Clandestine travel is always going to be possible especially if you are young and male. But now we are seeing more older people and more children. They are the ones who are going to find the routes out of Greece more difficult.
[/quote]
Live Ticker Eidomeni
[quote=Live Ticker Eidomeni]
The Balkan Corridor will officially close from midnight on. Slovenia and Serbia announced that they will re-introduce the Schengen regime meaning only people with visas can enter their territory. Consequently, Macedonia will keep its border shut for good. Again, racist and inhuman decisions have been made on fancy conferences tables over the lives of thousands of refugees and migrants. With the definite closure of the corridor, Europe is destroying the hopes of thousands of people. All the amazing people we have met during the last weeks, who have shown an incredible amount of strength and resilience are now facing the walls of re-fortified Europe.
Germany’s decision to suspend family reunifications a few months ago forced so many women to take the perilous journey across the sea with their children by themselves. This decision is the second massive blow for them. Many have their husbands in central Europe who have been desperately waiting for their arrival for months. Their hopes of joining them quickly have just been shattered in the mud of Idomeni, giving way to despair and anger.
[/quote]
The Sea Between Us -
The Sea Between Us - documentary on the refugee crisis on Lesvos.
Lesbos: Enter the hot spot - short documentary from Ross Domoney and Antonis Vradis
Quote: Who can afford to run
Untold Stories, Mark Anthony Myrie
Yannis Christodoulou, Evie
Yannis Christodoulou, Evie Papada, Anna Papoutsi & Antonis Vradis - Crisis or Zemblanity? Viewing the ‘Migration Crisis’ through a Greek Lens
See also http://www.transcapes.net
MariennaPW wrote: Mark, thank
MariennaPW
Here's MariennaPW's article:
Refugee crisis: the EU cracks down on volunteers
The Chios hotspot, after the
The Chios hotspot, after the EU-Turkey deal
Samos, day 2 of the EU-Turkey pact: glimpsing the nightmares to come
Platanos Refugee Solidarity
[quote=Platanos Refugee Solidarity]
A few time ago the "no border kitchen" that is standing for all that time next to the refugees arriving on the island far away from economic profits and systemic organizing, faced another threat of evacuation from the police. More specific, after the demand of the police to the solidarity people there for ahowing their id's, something that tbey denied, they informed them that they will return with more forces to evacuate the camp. There is needed people immediately at the beach of tsamakia to resist massively to that threat.
[/quote]
Mark, thanks for keeping this
Mark, thanks for keeping this thread going. The stream of news and info you're supplying is much appreciated.
Agreed
Agreed
Thanks! For anyone who reads
Thanks!
For anyone who reads Spanish here's a report on the situation following the EU-Turkey deal from Hibai Arbide Aza, one of the better journalists reporting on the refugee crisis:
Atenas: nadie sabe cómo aplicar el pacto
Hibai on twitter: https://mobile.twitter.com/Hibai_
'Dear EU WTF?'
'Dear EU WTF?'
Call to action from Soli
Call to action from Soli Cafe
Principia Marsupia
[quote=Principia Marsupia]
Hablando con una mujer cuyos 4 hijos fueron degollados por ISIS. Ahora duerme sola sobre las vías del tren al norte de Grecia.
A las puertas de Europa hay miles de víctimas de ISIS. Volverán a pasar la noche en el barro.
Que haya gente tratando de enfrentar a las víctimas de ISIS en Bruselas y las víctimas de ISIS en Idomeni... Resulta repugnante.
Llevo 2 días entrevistando a familias q huyen de ISIS. Historias de hijas violadas, hermanos degollados... los horrores más absolutos
Ahora duermen en el barro junto a frontera. Que haya gente en Europa que se atreva a acusarles de terroristas es la humillación última.
"Somos una familia de ingenieros y abogados. Una mañana apareció ISIS y degolló a todos. Yo conseguí escapar. Ahora bloqueado en Grecia"
"He visto cómo secuestraban a amigas mías y luego las vendían a hombres mayores por 200 dólares"
Ha seguido lloviendo durante toda la mañana y esta noche sopla un viento helado. Un mes ya en el barro. Idomeni se transforma en un infierno
Todas las mañanas visito a algunas familias q conozco bien. Es terrible ver cómo van decayendo física y emocionalmente día a día
Como cuando visitas a alguien q está muy enfermo y de un día para otro percibes su degradación. Es terrible lo q está ocurriendo aquí
Gente q te cuenta cómo ISIS degolló a sus hermanos. Ellos consiguieron escapar. Pero ahora bloqueados sin poder seguir ni volver atrás.
[/quote]
Kia Mistilis wrote: Not even
[quote=Kia Mistilis]
Not even 1 week into EU-Turkey deal & flagrant abuse of rights occurring. In #Greece #Asylum seekers detained w/out access to lawyers 1/3
#Greece also denying #asylum seekers right to claim asylum; no electricity, hot water, or adequate food, beds, heating, toilets at camps 2/3
Volunteers (doing lion's share of humanitarian work) denied access to camps. Media also banned. Deportations 2 #Turkey under armed guard 3/3
[/quote]
Teacher Dude wrote: Greek
[quote=Teacher Dude]
Greek govt squandering in days the good will Greece has garnered during the refugee crisis.
Greek people have been working in groups and/or individually to help #refugees whilst govt has been absent (cops excepted) for months
Do not judge the Greek people by the the shameful efforts of their govt to gain favour with EU over #refugees
The Greek govt's response to #refugees changing gear, was utterly indifferent, now changing to actively hostile
Greek SYRIZA govt selling out #refugees right in return for what exactly from #EU?Since Brussels rarely fulfills promises it doesn't like
For years I marched alongside #SYRIZA groups demanding better treatment for migrants/refugees now their govt violating its own basic values
Just how f**king stupid am I? Won't be fooled again by their rhetoric.
[/quote]
Benjamin Julian wrote: An
Benjamin Julian
Listen to the interview
Inhuman detention conditions
Inhuman detention conditions for refugees at Vial camp, Chios
Information given to Vial inmates today
Benjamin Julian - refugees
Benjamin Julian - refugees pay to go to prison
Report from the Ritsona camp,
Report from the Ritsona camp, north of Athens
Photos: protest in Mytilene today
Hope turns to despair as Lesvos camp becomes open air prison
Arrest at Moria demo
The paradox of the EU-Turkey refugee deal
Recent protests
Idomeni today Marianna
Idomeni today
[quote=Marianna Karakoulaki]
Now: A woman is giving birth in the camp in #Idomeni.
#refugeesGR are trying to protect the woman who is giving birth from all TV crews that have gathered around her tent.
Activists are attacking journalists who try to document the newborn baby
The newborn is a girl #refugeesGR #Idomeni
Greek journalists ask doctor if the woman felt pain.. 101 Greek journalism #morons
A happy and sad event at the same time took place in #Idomeni today. Hopefully the baby and mother will be safe https://twitter.com/d_tosidis/status/713757807649165316
[/quote]
[quote=Fotomovimiento]
Mujer pariendo ahora mismo en la tienda. Y la prensa no deja ni sitio. Un poco de respeto joder!
Y parir en una tienda. Dos médicos atendiendo sin ambulancia ni casi medios. Esto es una locura.
[/quote]
[quote=Enough is Enough!]
Disgusting scenes from camera crew of German #ZDF tv as baby was born at #Idomeni camp earlier today. They have no respect for #RefugeesGR
#ZDF tv crew continued filming after family asked to stop filming birth of the baby several times.
[/quote]
Meanwhile at the tea tent...
[quote=Teacher Dude]
Two reporters walked to head of our queue and tried grabbing tea, 'but we're Press' they cried when I stopped them #Idomeni
[/quote]
Our friends from Vial
[quote=Our friends from Vial]
Dear friends, this page tells the story of the 1275 people who are at this moment detained in the Camp on Chios, named Vial. Listen and find out first hand what is actually happening inside a Greek detention centre.
[/quote]
[quote=Our friends from Vial]
23 March at 16:04
Last night there was a protest in Vial. It was a protest against the bad conditions in the camp and the horrifying prospect of being deported to Turkey, a country deemed ''safe'' by the EU.
28st of Februari: Monira Jafari and her husbands were in Cesme, Turkey. They were hiding in the ''woods'' the place where everybody who is going to Chios, is awaiting the boat. There was a random police raid, which was unusual, since most of the time the police cooperates openly with the smugglers. Monira who was pregnant and her husband were severely beaten by the Turkish police and taken to a prison cell, were they ended up staying for 24 hours. Monira had severe abdominal pain whilst in detention. On 1st of March, as a direct result of the beating Monira and her husband lost their child.
They are just two of the 1500 people detained on Chios and awaiting their deportation back to Turkey...
[/quote]
A Greek human rights lawyer
A Greek human rights lawyer on the limitations of the UNHCR's reaction to the EU-Turkey deal. This deserves more attention and looks like something of a token show of non-participation. The IRC's reaction looks similar (stopping running buses to Moria basically). Some other NGOs seem to be making more of a genuine effort to avoid being part of the new set up.
[quote=Electra Leda Koutra]
UNHCR, which is fully aware of the fact that all these refugees cannot all at once have access to asylum in Greece, MUST INTERVENE URGENTLY and act CONSISTENTLY TO ITS MANDATE to characterize as PRIMA FACIE REFUGEES (refugees unless is proven otherwise) all those refugees currently stuck in Greece, to protect them from their IMMINENT DEPORTATION to Turkey.
Cancelling a bus service to Moria is NOT what the refugees expect from their legal representative. Not becoming an accomplice to the loss of their lives and dignity IS.
[/quote]
See also Ingvald Bertelsen's timeline for more questioning of the role of the UNHCR.
[quote=Ingvald Bertelsen]
@owebb According to their spokespersons, UNHCR are still active inside. Just stopped transporting to/from
@owebb Yes, they are doing exactly the same as before, except for the transport. They presented this as a big change, and media bought it :)
@owebb But also, since these camps probably will hold people until they are are returned - this may be a change in UNHCR's policies >
@owebb > They have earlier abstained from being present in detention camps of the pre-removal category
[/quote]
Refugees at Idomeni have
Refugees at Idomeni have marched to the border following rumours that it would open this morning. Follow Marianna Karakoulaki for updates.
Video from Vial camp, Chios
Video from Vial camp, Chios
Syriza to offer residence
Syriza to offer residence permits to refugees who can invest €250,000
Idomeni - disputes between
Idomeni - disputes between volunteers and activists?
Video from Idomeni protests yesterday
[quote=Live Ticker Eidomeni]
Saturday was reigned by the rumours that on Sunday the border to Macedonia/FYROM will be opened.
On Sunday morning several hundred refugees gathered to eventually cross into Macedonia/FYROM. Protest were also reported in Cherso camp. Tensions grew in Idomeni during the morning hours when Greek police increased its presence massively and made clear that there is no border opening to be expected. Meanwhile the police blocked a solidarity aid convoy on the highway. Apparently they were afraid of a possible disturbance into the permanently existing chaos at the camp.
Once again the authorities’ reaction to self-organized protest was to blame activists and volunteers for inciting and instrumentalising protests. In doing so, they denied political subjectivity to refugees and forget that the situation in Idomeni and Greece in general is reason enough to organize protest and to embrace every chance to leave.
....
[/quote]
Greek media coverage of the protests yesterday morning. ERT is the state TV station closed by the previous government and reopened under Syriza:
[quote=Teacher Dude]
On Greek state @ErtSocial journos trying to blame NGOs as a smoke screen to avoid talking about govt policy of returning #refugees to Turkey
Greek TV reporters now coming up with extreme conspiracy theories about role of NGOs in Greece, no evidence given, of course @ErtSocial
Reality is that Greek state has failed to provide even basic services for #refugees for over a year, NGOs and volunteer groups doing hard work
It's obvious 4 hacks on @ErtSocial TV programme have the faintest clue what's going on in places like Moria and #Idomeni,
One particular noxious hack even suggesting that Macedonian NGOs behind unrest at #Idomeni, talking about them as if they were enemy agents
@teacherdude Except for that - they are not blaming anyone in particular on the Greek side?
@ingbertelsen Basically, creating a negative climate for NGOs and volunteer groups in general, but failing to back up claims with proof
@teacherdude Good you are updating on this,. I see now this Proto Thema claims "major concerns have been raised" for four of 15 NGOs
@ingbertelsen But no evidence on what exactly they are supposed to have done, this is character assassination posing as journalism
....
Shameless appeals to viewers baser instincts by Greek hacks on panel show on #ERT1 TV now.
A**holes are just mindlessly repeating whatever conspiracy theory they've heard recently,not shred of evidence presented to back up anything
TV show is Akirvos at 10 (At 10 Exactly) on state run #ERT1 Shameless example of gutter journalism at expense of groups helping #refugees
Strong backlash in some sectors of Greek media against #refugees and those helping them, often openly racist in tone
Some hacks trying to curry favour with govt pols by attacking NGOs as way of drawing attention away from mass deportation of #refugees
....
Classic example of far right conspiracy theories propagated by Greek press. Note no concrete evidence at all in this https://twitter.com/eprotothema/status/713990742688006145
It talks about maps (no pics), it talks about "suspect" NGOs (no names given, or reason for suspicion given) - typical far right BS
So basically @protothema is spreading unfounded rumours, exactly the same charge it's levelling at NGOs/volunteer groups
[/quote]
Video: Syriza alternate
Video: Syriza alternate public order minister Nikos Toskas visits Vial
NPR broadcast: Lesvos after the EU-Turkey deal
Protest at Moria today
Classes at occupied school building in Exarchia (also here and here)
Greek language classes for refugees at Notara squat, Exarchia
cf. refugee reception run by the Greek army and UNHCR rather than anarchists: food distribution at Koutsochero camp, Larissa
Teacher Dude wrote: Large
[quote=Teacher Dude]
Large sections of Greek media still attacking NGOs/Volunteer groups helping #Refugees as way of deflecting criticism from govt
Reality is that many Greek journalists attacking those helping #refugees in order to curry favour with politicians in govt and opposition
Few institutions more corrupt & so easily bought in Greece as mainstream media. For decades hacks have been political systems's hired guns.
There has been a swing door between Greek media and political parties, often reporters work in multiple positions in both media and parties
But don't worry Greek MSM has the same kind of future as VCR manufacturers and typewriter repair schools - Good riddance
Rare to see any Greek under 40 reading a newspaper and young people no longer watching TV except on certain occasions.
[/quote]
In Spanish Hibai Arbide Aza
In Spanish
Hibai Arbide Aza on solidarity from ordinary Greek people
[quote=Principia Marsupia]
Tras un mes esperando, esta noche hay muchísima tensión en Idomeni.
La policía ha intentado sacar a la fuerza a los refugiados de la vía y se ha empezado a liar. Noche cerrada en Idomeni. Mucha tensión.
Los voluntarios nos cuentan q han detenido a varios de sus compañeros. Llegan más antidisturbios. Cada vez más tensión en Idomeni
La situación se ha calmado bastante. Un grupo de refugiados forman cadena para evitar roces con policía
Situación mucho más calmada ya. Antidisturbios han intentado desalojar vías tren y ha habido minutos de tensión. Ahora todo más tranquilo
[/quote]
In French A Athènes, le
In French
A Athènes, le quartier rebelle d’Exarchia solidaire des réfugiés
It looks like the number of
It looks like the number of refugees making it across is rising again after a few days of bad weather and aggressive policing on the Turkish side. If this continues conditions may get very bad in the island camps.
[quote=Michael Räber]
Hellenic coastguard brings in 500 detained #refugeesGr to port #Mytilini #Lesvos t/d. More ppl being rescued and detained on sea right now.
[/quote]
[quote=Proactiva]
Llegaron 40 personas costa Norte,150 costa Sur y 500 interceptadas por HCG-Frontex. Seguiremos asegurando el Egeo
[/quote]
Numbers of arrivals over the last week
ERT news broadcasts in Arabic
ERT news broadcasts in Arabic
Eric Kempson's video blogs -
Eric Kempson's video blogs - Mytilene on Sunday
Part 1
Part 2
British Navy on Lesvos? (I'm
British Navy on Lesvos? (I'm not sure the identity is confirmed)
Edit: ^This in fact seems to be the UK Border Force which comes under the Home Office and I think is technically a police rather than naval or military unit. They are acting as part of Frontex and are reportedly one of the most abusive units involved. The patrol vessel off Lesvos is the HMC Protector.
Lesvos: waiting for the containers
European border crackdown kickstarts migrant smuggling business
[quote=Asteris Masouras]
Another move against refugee solidarity in Lesvos. No longer useful to EU now that hotspots turned into gulags https://twitter.com/noborderkitchen/status/714878208320151556
[/quote]
[quote=Filio Kontrafouri]
Tmrw #Greece will pass legislation pertaining to refugee crisis, will designate what a 'safe country' is but will NOT name #Turkey as one
@filiopk and that will suffice?
@YanniKouts Absolutely not. Only makes this EU-Turkey deal more complex bc deal is nothing but tiny band-aid hastily put on a bleeding wound
[/quote]
Turkey as a safe third country?
Turkish deportations to Iraq
Pleiades report on living conditions at refugee camps
Amid their own crisis Greeks
Amid their own crisis Greeks stand by refugees (article on Platanos)
Open borders protest, Athens --- also here and here
No Border Kitchen Lesvos under threat of police raid and eviction
Drone footage, refugee camp at port of Piraeus
Baseball stadium from the 2004 Olympics
Samos Refugees wrote: MSF
[quote=Samos Refugees]
MSF Start Working Again
MSF have re-started their beach rescue service where they will again offer immediate medical and material support (clothes, tents, shoes, water, and food) to refugees arriving on the beaches of Samos. At this moment in time they are running 2 nightly teams including a doctor, translator, nurse and welfare worker who will patrol the north and south coasts of the island between 10pm and 6am.
Given MSF's opposition to the recent EU/Turkey pact on the grounds of its inhumanity, MSF will not collude with the authorities by transporting refugees from their landing places to the locked Detention Centre ( the Camp). Neither will they work directly with the police. So unlike past practice MSF will no longer take calls from the authorities asking them to go to landing places to help and transport the newly arriving refugees. It will be up to MSF and its supporters to find the refugees and hope that they will arrive before the police so some basic humanitarian aid can be provided before the police come to take the refugees to the camp.
MSF have provided the following telephone number 6971963987 to call either in Greek or English if you see refugees arriving. They will then respond.
Although it is still not clear how and if the new pact will operate in practice one thing is already obvious. It is now much harder to be close to the refugees on Samos and to show our solidarity and support. Their immediate landings are one of the few opportunities to embrace and care for the new arrivals.
So keep your eyes open and take a note of this number
6971963987
Updates
Around 8 boats of refugees have arrived since the pact came into force on March 20th. We have contact with some of the young Pakistani refugees locked in the camp and they continue to despair at the absence of any information and fearful that they are soon to be deported from Samos back to Turkey.
It would appear that some refugees have succeeded in keeping out of the camp.
Refugee flows here have always been unpredictable and it is too early to read anything into the fact that some boats have been arriving since the Pact. Not the least we have just had a period of very stormy seas which always reduces arrivals.
Refugees rarely have much choice in the precise routes they take into Europe once they place themselves in the hands of the smugglers. How this agreement affects the smugglers will certainly be a key influence in whether the routes through the Greek islands will continue to be busy.
There is talk on the island that deportations will start from Samos at the beginning of April. We will see.
[/quote]
Idomeni: interview with Cars
Idomeni: interview with Cars of Hope
More arrivals on Lesvos
More arrivals on Lesvos
Suggestion here of misleading
Suggestion here of misleading official figures on arrivals since the deal came into operation.
[quote=Louis Dowse]
Good morning: approx. 94 arrivals this AM to #Chios
Curious to see if there is sig. contrast between police stats and shoreline rescue stats again. Dubious official records...
Update: 217 people have arrived since last night
[/quote]
cam wrote: Vial detention
[quote=cam]
Vial detention centre on #Chios is now so overcrowded, the 200 new arrivals are being kept at the port.
....
Protest at #Vial, detained ppl burst out through the gates
After 30mins, cops make ppl return 2 Vial det.cntre. Worst are these guys frm charity MetAction, herding ppl inside.
METaction are an interpreter group - so why are they doing the work of the police. Scum
[/quote]
English language site for the scum in question: http://www.metadrasi.org/eng/
More on their interpretation services here. This comes across to me as an NGO being run as a business.
[quote=cam]
Oh yeah, and who else was at #Vial? UNHCR. So much for their 'refusal to participate in detention'
[/quote]
Nikolia Apostolou wrote: The
[quote=Nikolia Apostolou]
The EU-Turkey deal has not deterred #refugees to cross the Aegean Sea. It has made the passing more dangerous.
As the TR police stops them, #refugees now have needed up to 4 attempts to successfully reach Greece
5 boats arrived in the south of Lesbos today #refugees. Despite the Turkish coast-guard pulling many boats back, hard to stop the migrant flow
New GR gov rhetoric concerning the refugee crisis:"the NGOs are making people riot". Imagine you were stuck in Idomeni or Lesbos for months?
[/quote]
[quote=Eric Kempson]
Just had one boat of 50 people come in at Kia beach north Lesvos
Another 2 boats just came in at chapel north coast Lesvos 70 people
5 boats landed north coast lesvos
[/quote]
[quote=Natasha Tsangarides]
Contacts inside #moria say there are about 2000 people inside. Not enough food. Minors unit full. #refugeesgr #lesvos
[/quote]
Greek asylum system reaches
Greek asylum system reaches breaking point
Benjamin Julian wrote: Today
[quote=Benjamin Julian]
Today a protest was organized outside the Vial hotspot in Chios. Refugees took part by clapping and shouting and then broke out to join the protest outside. As they rushed out, they chanted “FREEDOM! FREEDOM! FREEDOM!” and continued chanting against deportations, for their asylum cases to be taken and appealing to Angela Merkel to improve their lot. The dozen or so policemen present, seemingly flabbergasted at this turn of events, put on helmets and positioned themselves between us and the refugees.
This faintly ridiculous setup was only symbolic. A friend of mine, whom I’d only talked with through a fence, just walked around the officers and shook my hand. “How are you doing?” he said with a beaming smile, as if we were meeting in a public park on a weekend stroll. People talked, walked around. Refugees enjoyed looking at their prison from the outside.
However, there wasn’t much for them to do outside. They’ve had some opportunities to leave the prison by climbing over the fence and walking the several kilomteres to town, but they can’t leave the island and are easily identifiable here. This is the genius of keeping them on the islands, which were cleared of refugees before they arrived. This also exposes how ludicrous their imprisonment is. If they can break out and still have no place to go, why lock them up in the first place?
As it turned out, most went inside again. A committee of local people visited the facility to check out conditions there. Police split off the more vociferous protesters, presumably to bring the protest to an early close, and because they had absolutely no capacity for a greater action.
Refugees mostly reacted with bemused indifference. They slowly went inside again at their leisure, underlining what an absurdity the locked door policy is.
At the end of the protest many interviews were given. People inside still haven’t got hot water, so they can’t clean themselves or their clothes. They’ve been there for 11 days, by and large, are still unhappy about the food, tensions inside are still running high and people seem more and more to reply “I’m not doing good” when asked how they feel. Asylum processing has finally started, with numerous problems and delays, but people are desparate. They didn’t come to Greece to remain in this country of economic disaster. They know people in the north of Europe. They want to go there. And the fact is that even if they apply for asylum here, they probably won’t get it.
But they have been through plenty, and this will not break them. There are other ways into Europe, other ways to get by. The walls may seem impregnable, the authorities unbeatable, but most of the time this is all an illusion. Sometimes all it takes is just shaking open the fence and walking around the policeman, and freedom is yours.
[/quote]
Video of the break out
European policy is driving
European policy is driving refugees to more dangerous routes across the Med
Refugees broke out of Vial
Refugees broke out of Vial camp again yesterday and are occupying Chios port. See Benjamin Julian's timeline: https://mobile.twitter.com/blidfinnur
Amnesty report on forced
Amnesty report on forced returns of refugees from Turkey to Syria
EU-Turkey deal: staff shortages and rights concerns
Video: MAT riot police
Video: MAT riot police clashing with locals on Chios earlier tonight
... and with Afghan refugees in Vial, I think following this
Deportations from Lesvos and Chios are due to start tomorrow morning.
Edit: Report in Greek on the clashes in Chios town - these seem to have been over a protest against the transfer of refugees to a building there in advance of being deported. Another video of the same incident here
Meanwhile...
[quote=Bruno Tersago]
In the past 24 hours, 888 #refugees arrived on #Lesbos, 462 on #Chios & 31 on #Samos
[/quote]
The situation on Samos
Plans for deportations from Lesvos
Advice for volunteers observing the deportations tomorrow morning
returnwatch.org
Solidarity structures in
Solidarity structures in Greece confronted with criminalization and control
BBC World Service interview with asylum lawyer Electra Koutra
Deportations from Lesvos and Chios started this morning
[quote=Patrick Kingsley]
The people being deported today are supposedly those who chose not to apply for asylum in Greece. Key Q: did they have the opp to do so?
Vast majority of those on this first boat are people from Pakistan, Morocco – only 2 Syrians. IE not really a test of the deal.
To repeat, this is not really a test of new deal. We understand the deportees are mainly Pakistanis, who were already deported prior to deal
[/quote]
[quote=Nick Barnets]
136 deported from #Lesvos, 66 #Chios, all taken to #Dikili. Mainly Pakistanis, 2 Syrians all left voluntarily, didn't apply for asylum -spox
Told there is no quota for deportations right now, just to return those that did not wish to apply for asylum.
[/quote]
[quote=Benjamin Julian]
Inmate in #Vial prison for #refugeesGr, #Chios, says people deported this morning requested asylum, didn't get interview
[/quote]
Will Horner wrote: Today's
[quote=Will Horner]
Today's returns to #Turkey were purely symbolic. #Refugees in #Moria told me all deportees had arrived BEFORE #EUTurkeyDeal
(contd.) Not to mention the fact that 124 of 136 deportees today were from Pakistan and Pakistanis were already being deported since 1 Jan
@PatrickKingsley Pakistani asylum seeker in Lesbos told me they thought claiming asylum would harm chances of getting to mainland
@PatrickKingsley He also said that Pakistanis who tried to claim asylum at last minute were refused and held in detention section of Moria
[/quote]
One thing this does indicate is the dishonesty of the UNHCR in all this. See this statement from Melissa Fleming
Just want to express my
Just want to express my appreciation to Mark for all his information links and updates.
Thanks. Daphne Tolis
Thanks.
[quote=Daphne Tolis]
Today's & tomorrow's planned deportations from #Chios to #Turkey cancelled as "100 to-be-returned refugees disappeared" says @tovimagr.
[/quote]
Apostolis Fotiadis - So the Greece deportations are going ‘smoothly’? Take a closer look
Greece may have deported asylum seekers by mistake, says UN
[quote=Natasha Tsangarides]
2 men deported from #lesvos and forcibly returned to #turkey have attempted suicide #refugeesGr http://www.politikalesvos.gr/dyo-aftoktonies-meta-tin-apelasi-ton-metanaston-stin-tourkia/
[/quote]
[quote=Eric Reidy]
Pakistani committed suicide inside #Moria detention center today - source inside. Confirmed w NGOs.
[/quote]
Edit: The report of a suicide has been denied - I'm not sure which is true.
[quote=Eric Reidy]
Clarification: no suicide in Moria yesterday. Attempt on Sunday night, not successful.
[/quote]
Interview with Benjamin
Interview with Benjamin Julian
"We will all commit suicide
"We will all commit suicide if they deport us"
Video from Samos
Video from Samos
Anti-refugee protest on
Anti-refugee protest on Chios, still going on.
See Oscar Webb's timeline: https://mobile.twitter.com/owebb
Earlier tonight: Souidos
Earlier tonight:
[quote=Souidos]
#athens #now cops detain #refugees who attempt to reach the center from the port of Piraeus. Anarchists organize spontaneous solidarity demo
#now Anarchist demo on its way to #athens police hq in solidarity with #refugees
According to officials, detained #refugees from #athens center will be released soon. Concerns about police raid in the port of Piraeus
[/quote]
[quote=Benjamin Julian]
Fights break out as #Chios municipality discusses #refugeesGr
....
Right wing protests in #Chios over, council meeting goes on
....
#Chios municipal council decides to request the Greek government make #Vial open, otherwise permission to use the place will be withdrawn
Molotov cocktail thrown at Soli Cafe, #Chios, after right wing protests against #refugeesGr
[/quote]
Oscar Webb wrote: People
[quote=Oscar Webb]
People who've set up a kitchen in Chios town to feed refugees say their house was attacked last night by 20 men who threw a molotov cocktail
They say the men came and went between 11pm and 3am, started a fire nearby, threatened to burn the house down, until the police arrived
[/quote]
Golden Dawn were involved in the racist protest last night so they're likely suspects for this.
NYT editorial - A deal that
NYT editorial - A deal that puts lives at risk
As one route closes another
As one route closes another opens, almost certainly a more dangerous one:
Hundreds arrive in Italy on boat from Egypt
Edit: a better report here
Gunilla von Hall
[quote=Gunilla von Hall]
Around hundred refugees broke out from camp in Samos. Reportedly had knives. Police and military waiting for orders.
Syrian woman in wheelchair among refugees who broke out of prison camp in Samos. Many women and children here too.
[/quote]
damomac wrote: In #Vial
[quote=damomac]
In #Vial detention centre, #Chios, the one asylum worker has processed 10 of 833 asylum applications, rejecting 9 pic.twitter.com/VdCkHIRTsv
[/quote]
[quote=Patrick Kingsley]
Across the Aegean in Turkey, aid workers and journalists were denied access to the 13 asylum seekers allegedly deported from Chios by mistake on the first day of the EU-Turkey deal, raising concerns that they could be expelled from Turkey without legal recourse.
The UN says the 13 were not given the chance to apply for asylum before their deportation to Turkey on Monday – undermining EU claims that all asylum seekers would be given the chance to claim asylum in Greece.
The 13 are being held in a remote detention centre in Pehlivanköy, north-western Turkey, built in recent weeks with EU money – and now await deportation from Turkey to their home countries.
On Wednesday, Ankara refused to allow the UN high commissioner for refugees access to the asylum seekers, and also turned down a request from the Guardian to interview them. A police officer guarding the facility told the Guardian that those inside could be deported “within two weeks – or two days”.
[/quote]
Benjamin Julian
[quote=Benjamin Julian]
Locals threaten refugees in the Chios port with violence. People here are very tense, some crying, many protesting, police tells them to go to Souda for their own safety. After yesterday's violent attacks on Soli Cafe, refugees are scared. They're being offered a bus to Souda, people are afraid it will take them to the Vial prison. Alleged fascists stand nearby and watch the scene unfold. Evacuation of the port is a possibility, though a remote one.
[/quote]
Oscar Webb wrote: Clashes
[quote=Oscar Webb]
Clashes between refugee and right-wing crowd- crowd chases him. Crowd surrounds port. Police just walked away #Chios
It's mob rule here. Right wing crowd braying for violence on edges of port. Women and kids running and screaming away. No police.
Chaos in Chios - accurate now
Refugees penned further into the port, mob outside. Ferry coming in. Small number of army have arrived
Women just taken away in ambulance for shock.
Mayor of the island here trying to convince refugees to move out of the port for their own safety.
Refugees adamant that they will not move
Right wing crowd and refugees silent as mayor negotiates, asking ppl to go to an open camp nearby.
[/quote]
Amnesty International report
Amnesty International report from Moria and Vial
Oscar Webb wrote: Discussion
[quote=Oscar Webb]
Discussion amongst refugees as to whether to move going on #Chios
Some families packing up and leaving #Chios port for what they're told is Souda camp, an open facility nearby
One family just left port 'we're the first, the others will follow', says father
Voluntary leaving turns into eviction of port: police take two men out. Standoff now
Police saying: 'no more negotiations, you have to leave now'.
Fireworks thrown into port by right wing crowd. women/kids crying.Still resolute they're staying.More arrests
And all of the refugees have left the port and are walking to Souda refugee camp, also in Chios town, nearby #Chios
Crowd outside give police and mayor round of applause.
[/quote]
spyros gkelis wrote: Big
[quote=spyros gkelis]
Big mobilization of the NeoNazi #GoldenDawn with sticks / helmets in #Piraeus. GD leaders Michaloliakos-Kasidiaris are there.
[/quote]
[quote=kinimatini]
Golden Dawn members gathering with helmets below the police station of Piraeus. chanting antiislamic xenofobic racists nazi slogans
[/quote]
[quote=Souidos]
After attacking #antifa, riot cops in #Pireaus in friendly negotiations with nazis https://twitter.com/dromografosNews/status/718456400767225856
Again riot cops and nazis together #Pireaus #antifa #refugeesgr https://twitter.com/kinimatini/status/718458350560755712
[/quote]
The authorities have been trying to pressurise refugees to leave Piraeus for camps outside Athens. tbh it's getting harder to see Golden Dawn, the police, Syriza, Frontex, the EU and the UNHCR as being on different sides.
Video from Chios last night
Deportations took place again this morning.
[quote=Andrew Connelly]
2nd day of mass expulsions on #Lesbos this morning ~50 awaiting embarkation on boat to #Turkey Nationalities unknown
Four protesters at #Mytilene port of #Lesbos just jumped into the sea, swimming to the #Frontex deportation boat
#Frontex: 45 Pakistani males on today's deportation boat to #Turkey. None requested asylum, allegedly.
Today's deportees #Lesbos-#Turkey who 'didn't claim asylum' not be confused w/ those that 'didn't claim' on Monday, which UNHCR claim 13 did
Second deportation. 50 from #Kos 29 from #Samos brought by ferry to #Lesbos then onto #Frontex boat. Nationality tbc
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kinimatini wrote: Syriza
[quote=kinimatini]
Syriza says that refugees cannot organize themselves against state & Europe brutality so they blame the anarchists/volunteers
Syriza "forgets" that we are all humans & that we communicate with each other. Refugees are friends in need. We stand with them
#RefugeesGr deny to go to the camps Syriza gov proposed.Some of them went to the camps and there are no facilities there so they came back.
they took pictures of the camps with their phones and then they spreaded the info to each other.
Most of the camps Syriza proposes to the refugees to go are empty spaces, away from the city with few transportations. >>
so Greece proposes to asylum seekers, children & mothers who survived war to go camp in rural areas away from the city... !?!?!
Greece is evacuating all camps of Refugees at the ports because the tourist are coming for vacations.
TOURISTS GO BACK TO YOUR COUNTRY.
WE PREFER THE REFUGEES.
URGENT CALL TO COMRADES ALL OVER THE WORLD.
WE NEED YOUR HELP IN GREECE
WE NEED TO BUILD A STRONG SHIELD AND PROTECT THE REFUGEES.
Already comrades from all over the world are here helping and occuping empty spaces to host refugees.
If you cannot come here plz help by spreading the right info. This tag #refugeesGr providew critical info everyday
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Another video from Chios last
Another video from Chios last night