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Greek police tear gas migrants after police van attacked

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Greek police on Monday fired tear gas at a group of angry migrants in a flashpoint border camp as they stoned a police van believed to have run over one of their own.

TV footage showed young migrants smashing the van's windshield with stones, with some in the crowd trying to restrain them.

According to a local police source, riot police intervened and quickly dispersed them in the latest incident of violence at Idomeni camp on the Greece-Macedonia border.

The protest erupted after the Syrian Kurd was rushed to hospital from the overcrowded camp where more than 10,000 people have been stranded for weeks since the Balkans states shut their borders.

A Greek government source confirmed there had been a "serious accident" involving a Syrian Kurd aged around 40, who suffered cranial injuries, but declined to comment further.

The man was taken to hospital in the nearby town of Kilkis.

It was not immediately clear how he had been hurt inside the teeming camp where vehicles are forced to move at low speeds.

Greek media said he had fallen from scaffolding.

Thousands of migrants and refugees are stuck at the squalid, makeshift camp after their route to northern Europe was blocked when a succession of Balkan states shut their borders in a bid to halt the huge influx of people.

Many are refugees from the wars in Syria and Iraq.

Greek authorities have sought to clear the camp without resorting to violence but most of the migrants have refused to relocate to other facilities further inland, hoping that the borders might reopen.

- Desperate to escape -

A similar situation has emerged at the main Greek port of Piraeus where there are over 3,700 people. Another 400 were persuaded on Monday to move from the port to a newly-constructed camp at the nearby industrial zone of Skaramangas.

A young man carrying a baby holds a cardboard reading
A young man carrying a baby holds a cardboard reading "Your silence is killing us" as he protests with other migrants and refugees in the makeshift camp at the Greek-Macedonian border on April 18, 2016
Daniel Mihailescu, AFP

After enduring a winter of freezing rain and mud, sleeping in tents and queueing for hours for food, many are desperate for a way out.

Last week, some 250 migrants were hurt as they tried to force their way through the Macedonian border fence and were hit with tear gas and rubber bullets, according to doctors who treated them afterwards.

A month earlier, hundreds trekked out of Idomeni and crossed a river into Macedonia but were stopped by Macedonian police and sent back, some of them claiming to have been beaten there.

Encouraged by volunteer activists, the migrants have also occupied the railway track between Greece and Macedonia, blocking the passage of freight trains for weeks.

Greek police on Monday fired tear gas at a group of angry migrants in a flashpoint border camp as they stoned a police van believed to have run over one of their own.

TV footage showed young migrants smashing the van’s windshield with stones, with some in the crowd trying to restrain them.

According to a local police source, riot police intervened and quickly dispersed them in the latest incident of violence at Idomeni camp on the Greece-Macedonia border.

The protest erupted after the Syrian Kurd was rushed to hospital from the overcrowded camp where more than 10,000 people have been stranded for weeks since the Balkans states shut their borders.

A Greek government source confirmed there had been a “serious accident” involving a Syrian Kurd aged around 40, who suffered cranial injuries, but declined to comment further.

The man was taken to hospital in the nearby town of Kilkis.

It was not immediately clear how he had been hurt inside the teeming camp where vehicles are forced to move at low speeds.

Greek media said he had fallen from scaffolding.

Thousands of migrants and refugees are stuck at the squalid, makeshift camp after their route to northern Europe was blocked when a succession of Balkan states shut their borders in a bid to halt the huge influx of people.

Many are refugees from the wars in Syria and Iraq.

Greek authorities have sought to clear the camp without resorting to violence but most of the migrants have refused to relocate to other facilities further inland, hoping that the borders might reopen.

– Desperate to escape –

A similar situation has emerged at the main Greek port of Piraeus where there are over 3,700 people. Another 400 were persuaded on Monday to move from the port to a newly-constructed camp at the nearby industrial zone of Skaramangas.

A young man carrying a baby holds a cardboard reading

A young man carrying a baby holds a cardboard reading “Your silence is killing us” as he protests with other migrants and refugees in the makeshift camp at the Greek-Macedonian border on April 18, 2016
Daniel Mihailescu, AFP

After enduring a winter of freezing rain and mud, sleeping in tents and queueing for hours for food, many are desperate for a way out.

Last week, some 250 migrants were hurt as they tried to force their way through the Macedonian border fence and were hit with tear gas and rubber bullets, according to doctors who treated them afterwards.

A month earlier, hundreds trekked out of Idomeni and crossed a river into Macedonia but were stopped by Macedonian police and sent back, some of them claiming to have been beaten there.

Encouraged by volunteer activists, the migrants have also occupied the railway track between Greece and Macedonia, blocking the passage of freight trains for weeks.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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