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Greek island mayors protest overcrowding in refugee camps

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Mayors and residents of Greece's Aegean islands, which are sheltering more than 15,000 refugees and migrants, on Tuesday called for the government to relocate people from overcrowded camps into centres on the mainland.

"The islands, and especially Lesbos, are facing an emergency," the island's mayor Spyros Galinos told protesters gathered outside Greece's migration ministry.

Galinos said they wanted to force Athens to listen to the islanders, but also convey that migrants are living "in unsuitable accommodation" and that their lives are "in danger from the elements".

The Moria camp on Lesbos, the largest in the Aegean, is now the size of a small town, with more than 6,500 people occupying a facility built to handle 2,300.

Some people have been forced to sleep in flimsy tents outside the enclosure.

"Boats arrive every day," camp manager Yiannis Balbakakis told the Ethnos daily. "We cannot leave anyone without shelter".

"We are working non-stop to manage the situation, but there needs to be immediate relocation".

Aid groups have warned that transferring refugees to heated accommodation before winter is a matter of life and death.

Three refugees died last year in their tents in Moria from apparent carbon monoxide poisoning caused by makeshift stoves.

The Greek government grants asylum to refugees who have passed arduous background checks, allowing them to travel to the mainland. Vulnerable cases such as unaccompanied minors and elderly persons are also more easily approved.

But Athens says it is wary of moving large numbers of asylum seekers to the mainland, arguing it would simply send the message to people smugglers to ferry more people over.

They also accuse local mayors of hampering efforts to create additional space on the islands or to rent hotel rooms.

Migration minister Yiannis Mouzalas has also warned that relocating refugees en masse to the mainland goes against an EU-Turkey pact that has helped limit new flows for the past two years.

The island mayors counter that Turkey has failed to honour its own commitments to take back migrants not eligible for asylum.

"The entire pact should be applied, not half of it," said Chios mayor Manolis Vournous. "So far we've had very few returns. We want our societies to return to normal."

Samos mayor Michalis Angelopoulos said the question had to be put to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Erdogan will be on a two-day visit to Athens starting Thursday.

During the past year, the Turkish leader has threatened to scrap the migration pact during repeated rows with Brussels over his government's anti-terror laws and an ongoing crackdown against dissidents.

Mayors and residents of Greece’s Aegean islands, which are sheltering more than 15,000 refugees and migrants, on Tuesday called for the government to relocate people from overcrowded camps into centres on the mainland.

“The islands, and especially Lesbos, are facing an emergency,” the island’s mayor Spyros Galinos told protesters gathered outside Greece’s migration ministry.

Galinos said they wanted to force Athens to listen to the islanders, but also convey that migrants are living “in unsuitable accommodation” and that their lives are “in danger from the elements”.

The Moria camp on Lesbos, the largest in the Aegean, is now the size of a small town, with more than 6,500 people occupying a facility built to handle 2,300.

Some people have been forced to sleep in flimsy tents outside the enclosure.

“Boats arrive every day,” camp manager Yiannis Balbakakis told the Ethnos daily. “We cannot leave anyone without shelter”.

“We are working non-stop to manage the situation, but there needs to be immediate relocation”.

Aid groups have warned that transferring refugees to heated accommodation before winter is a matter of life and death.

Three refugees died last year in their tents in Moria from apparent carbon monoxide poisoning caused by makeshift stoves.

The Greek government grants asylum to refugees who have passed arduous background checks, allowing them to travel to the mainland. Vulnerable cases such as unaccompanied minors and elderly persons are also more easily approved.

But Athens says it is wary of moving large numbers of asylum seekers to the mainland, arguing it would simply send the message to people smugglers to ferry more people over.

They also accuse local mayors of hampering efforts to create additional space on the islands or to rent hotel rooms.

Migration minister Yiannis Mouzalas has also warned that relocating refugees en masse to the mainland goes against an EU-Turkey pact that has helped limit new flows for the past two years.

The island mayors counter that Turkey has failed to honour its own commitments to take back migrants not eligible for asylum.

“The entire pact should be applied, not half of it,” said Chios mayor Manolis Vournous. “So far we’ve had very few returns. We want our societies to return to normal.”

Samos mayor Michalis Angelopoulos said the question had to be put to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Erdogan will be on a two-day visit to Athens starting Thursday.

During the past year, the Turkish leader has threatened to scrap the migration pact during repeated rows with Brussels over his government’s anti-terror laws and an ongoing crackdown against dissidents.

AFP
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