after travelling from Iraq with his wife and three children. He said they had paid 4,000 euros to smugglers for a boat transport from Turkey to Greece, adding that “three people died on the way”.
“I want to go to Germany for work. I want to be safe and live like a human being. That’s why I choose to come to Europe,” he said, as his family was waiting to enter Macedonia and continue northwards to the EU.
Police had previously said they would only admit “a limited number” of people but they were not making any attempt to stop those crossing, the correspondents said.
Late on Saturday, more than 1,500 people who had been stranded in no-man’s land for three days were allowed to cross into Macedonia, joining thousands who had managed to break through the police cordon or who sneaked in through the forested hills.
They then headed for Macedonia’s northern border with Serbia, travelling the 180-kilometre journey in buses, taxis and trains, local media reported.
Until this weekend, more than 42,000 people, including more than 7,000 children, entered Macedonia from Greece since mid-June, the government in Skopje said.
Once they reach Serbia, many try to make their way to Hungary, which is a major crossing point into the EU, although the country is building a four-metre barbed wire fence along its 175-kilometre border to stop the influx
Europe is currently struggling with a huge influx of migrants in what the EU has described as its worst refugee crisis since World War II.
Official figures show a record 107,500 migrants crossed into the EU last month in a figure which looks set to increase.
In Rome, Italian officials said the coastguard had rescued 4,400 migrants from 22 boats in the Mediterranean on Saturday in what was understood to be the highest daily figure in years.
The number raises to more than 108,000 the number that have arrived in Italy alone this year, prompting Foreign Minister Paolo Gentiloni to warn that the deepening immigration crisis could pose a major threat to the “soul” of Europe.
“On immigration, Europe is in danger of displaying the worst of itself: selfishness, haphazard decision-making and rows between member states,” Gentiloni told Il Messaggero.
“I am very worried. Today it is on this issue that Europe will either rediscover its soul or lose it for good.”
And in Germany, Vice Chancellor Sigmar Gabriel and Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier issued a joint call for Europe to “fairly” share out the refugees in an article published in Sunday’s Frankfurter Allgemeine. They also called for a “European asylum code” that would guarantee bloc-wide asylum status.