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Thursday April 25, 2024

Rising tide of illegal immigrants swamp Greek

MYTILENE, Greece: The Greek island of Lesbos is being flooded by a rising tide of people seeking to illegally migrate to Europe from the nearby Turkish coast on just about anything that will float. “The situation is no longer manageable,” said International Organization for Migration worker Zoi Livaditou, who each

By our correspondents
April 21, 2015
MYTILENE, Greece: The Greek island of Lesbos is being flooded by a rising tide of people seeking to illegally migrate to Europe from the nearby Turkish coast on just about anything that will float.
“The situation is no longer manageable,” said International Organization for Migration worker Zoi Livaditou, who each morning takes stock of new groups of immigrants plucked from the Aegean Sea or arriving on the beach after risky night-time crossings.
“We’re averaging around 200 arrivals each day,” Livaditou said, noting that Lesbos’ capital, Mytilene, counts only 36,000 full-time residents.
But with both Mytilene and a recently-opened detention centre now overflowing — and with aid workers unable to give those rescued much more than survival blankets — local officials now see little alternative to letting immigrants continue on their journey to reach Athens.
“We started on foot from Iran,” said a 25-year-old Iran-born Afghan who recently arrived from the Turkish coast, visible to the naked eye from Lesbos.
“We walked nearly 20 hours towards Turkey without food or water, and some people were injured,” he said, adding that he left his mother and two brothers behind in the hopes of getting “a chance to be reborn” in Europe.
Most migrants make the crossing to Lesbos in inflatable boats supplied by human traffickers. Confiscated by the Greek coast guard, a growing number of the flimsy vessels can now be seen bobbing on the waves near the island’s pier.
“It was very dangerous. The inflatable boat was packed with people, it was dark, and there were lots of little children,” said Ismail Kadilah, a 37-year-old Kurd who fled the war-ravaged Syrian city of Aleppo.
Encountered as he disembarked from a ferry in Athens’ Piraeus port, Kadilah said he spent “two days in a camp on Lesbos.” After that, he said, authorities “released us and bought us a ticket for Athens.”
Kadilah said his wife and three children were still in Turkey, waiting for him to “rent an apartment thanks to someone we know from Syria who is already in Athens” — a phrase often used by immigrants who take squalid rooms from slum landlords doing business in Greece’s capital. The market for such shady services is ripe.
Neither Athens nor other Greek cities have many facilities to provide first aid or lodgings to migrants and asylum seekers.
According to the state secretariat for immigration created by Greece’s new hard-left government, the entire country counts only 200 emergency quarters, 1,000 lodgings and 300 rooms to house minors.
The new government blames that scarcity on the political priorities of previous cabinets. Those, officials say, focused on opening confinement centres with capacities for about 4,500 immigrants each, and where detention can last up to 18 months. To deal with the surging influx of people, government officials have called on local authorities to use abandoned state buildings, stadiums or military barracks as temporary quarters for newly arrived immigrants.