Migrants and refugees protested on a Greek island and rights groups
raised legal objections three days before a disputed EU deal to return
rejected asylum seekers from Greece to Turkey was due to go into action,
with neither side completely ready.
Hundreds of migrants and refugees on the island of Chios tore through
a razor wire fence surrounding their holding center and set off for the
port in protest against planned deportation, police said. Police did
not immediately intervene.
Clashes broke out at the site late on Thursday, during which windows
were smashed and 10 people were injured lightly, a police official said.
Some 300 women and children broke out of the camp on Friday carrying
their belongings.
"They say that they don't want to go back to
Turkey and that they are afraid for their safety after yesterday's
clashes between migrants in the hot spot," a police official said, using
the EU term for registration centers that have become detention camps.
The tension on Chios raised the possibility of resistance when the
EU-Turkey plan to send back all migrants and refugees who have reached
the Greek islands since March 20 goes into effect from Monday.
Although arrivals have slowed, more than 1,900 people have crossed
from Turkey to Greece so far this week and a total of 5,622 have been
registered since March 20.
The European Union plans to send hundreds of police and migration
officers to Greece over the weekend to help carry out the first returns
under a deal meant to end the uncontrolled influx of migrants.
More than a million people fleeing war and poverty in the Middle East
and beyond have poured into Europe in the last year, most ending up in
Germany, triggering a political backlash and pitting EU governments
against each other.
However, the U.N. refugee agency and rights group Amnesty
International raised objections, with Amnesty accusing Turkey of sending
thousands of people trying to flee Syria back into the war-racked
country in recent months.
"In their desperation to seal their borders, EU leaders have wilfully
ignored the simplest of facts: Turkey is not a safe country for Syrian
refugees and is getting less safe by the day," said John Dalhuisen,
Amnesty International's director for Europe and Central Asia.
The European Commission said it was investigating the Amnesty charge
and would raise the issue with the Turkish authorities, who had promised
to apply the principle of non-refoulement under the Brussels pact.
"SERIOUS GAPS"
UNHCR spokeswoman Melissa Fleming told a Geneva news briefing there
were still serious legal gaps in both Greece and Turkey and urged all
sides to ensure all safeguard were in place before any returns begin.
The Greek parliament was set to adopt a bill amending the country's
asylum laws to enable asylum seekers and other migrants to be sent back
to so-called safe countries, without explicitly naming Turkey.
Migration Minister Yiannis Mouzalas sought to reassure lawmakers of
the ruling left-wing Syriza party that Athens would not be party to
violating migrants' human rights.
"A blame-game against our country is starting, that, based on the new
agreement we will encroach on human rights," he told parliament. "I
assure you – and I believe this will relieve everyone – that we will
strictly adhere to human rights procedures as stipulated by
international law and the Geneva Convention."
There was no indication that Turkey was about to change its
regulations to grant international protection to non-Syrians returned
from the Greek islands as stipulated in the EU deal.
The Turkish parliament was in session on Friday but officials said
there were nothing on the agenda relating to the migration agreement. It
is not due to sit again until Tuesday.
Any new legislation would need to be signed by President Tayyip
Erdogan, who is on an official visit to the United States until at least
Sunday, although Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu could in theory sign an
executive order.
The European Commission continued to put an optimistic face on the
implementation plan after EU special envoy Maarten Verwey held talks in
Ankara on last-minute preparations.
"Preparations are now well under way to ensure that returns of
persons whose asylum claims have been declared inadmissible, and those
who have not claimed protection, can start in line with the resettlement
of Syrians from Turkey on April 4," Commission spokeswoman Mina
Andreeva told a briefing.
Asked about the absence of Turkish guarantees on the treatment of
non-Syrians, she said no one who would not benefit from international
protection would be returned to Turkey.
Altogether some 53,000 migrants and refugees are trapped in Greece in
deteriorating conditions after its northern neighbors closed their
border to bar the route northwards to Germany.
The UNHCR said conditions on the islands of Lesbos and Samos and at
the Athens port of Piraeus and Idomeni at the border with Macedonia were
worsening.
"The risk of panic and injury in these sites and others is real," UNHCR spokeswoman Fleming said.
No comments:
Post a Comment