Anger simmers in Greek migrant camp over living conditions

Anger simmers in Greek migrant camp over living conditions

by Joseph Anthony
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Children climb at the entrace of the refugee camp at the disused Hellenikon airport, blocked by refugees and migrants, most of them Afghans, in Athens

A group of Afghan refugees in Greece protested against their living conditions on Monday by chanting โ€œLiar!โ€ as they tried to block a minister from entering the former Athens airport terminal where they have been stranded for months.

Children stuck inside the compound climbed up a metal gate while dozens of protesters pushed and shoved one another as they shouted โ€œGo, Go!โ€ at Migration Minister Yannis Mouzalas. One man handed him a crying child as he reached the chained gate.

About 1,600 refugees and migrants live at Hellenikon, a former airport complex that also houses abandoned venues used in the 2004 Olympic Games. Of those, 600 live in the old arrivals terminal, sharing tents in unsanitary conditions.

โ€œWe have a bad situation in this camp. Itโ€™s like one year in jail,โ€ said an Afghan man who identified himself as Massoud.

Human rights groups, including Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, have criticised conditions in Greeceโ€™s makeshift and formal camps, describing them as deplorable and unfit for humans.

โ€œThe situation in Greece โ€ฆ is still very concerning to us,โ€ said Monica Costa of Amnesty International, who is on a fact-finding mission at Greek camps this week.

โ€œThere are still thousands of people languishing in camps that are not prepared for long-term stay,โ€ she said.

Greece has long said it plans to clear out Hellenikon โ€“ which housed up to 3,000 refugees and migrants in scorching temperatures last summer โ€“ after agreeing to lease it to private investors under its bailout programme.

โ€œHellenikon must be cleared out,โ€ Mouzalas reiterated on Monday.

The protesters were demanding better quality food, better sanitation facilities and hot water.

โ€œI completely understand their pain and hardship. We are trying to ease it as much as we can,โ€ Mouzalas said.

About 60,000 refugees and migrants have been in Greece for nearly a year after border shutdowns throughout the Balkans halted the onward journey many planned to take to central and western Europe.

Costa said Amnesty researchers had observed โ€œpsychological deterioration, a lot of stress,โ€ in the camps, exacerbated by lengthy asylum procedures and uncertainty over the future.

Greek authorities have yet to determine the cause of death of three migrants who died within a week in one camp on the island of Lesbos this month.

โ€œSince the closure of the Balkan route, this humanitarian crisis unfolded, and we have already said that this crisis was completely avoidable,โ€ Costa said.

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