Story highlights
- Thousands stranded in area between Macedonia and Greece
- Syrian refugees separate themselves from others who they claim are economic migrants
- Small groups of the most vulnerable refugees are let though by officials
Hundreds of refugees in Greece have forced their way over
the Macedonian border as police fired stun grenades in a failed bid to
stop them breaking through.
For the second day in a row, police fired stun grenades and clashed
with refugees trying to rush over the border between Greece and
Macedonia.
Al Jazeera's Jonah Hull, reporting from Idomeni, on the Greek side of
the border, said he heard seven loud blasts from his position 150m
away.
The AFP news agency said the refugees scrambled over barbed wire fences on Saturday as the border guards tried to stop them.
Thousands of rain-soaked refugees have been trapped in a no man's land since Thursday.
Overnight on Friday, police had let small groups of families with
children cross the border by walking to a railway station in the
Macedonian town of Gevgelija, where most take trains to the border with
Serbia, before heading towards EU-member Hungary.
Those who could not cross, including many women and children, spent
the rainy and chilly night in the open, the AP news agency reported.
RELATED: Why Al Jazeera will not say Mediterranean 'migrants'
Hull said large numbers of Syrians had earlier moved back from the
point of crossing to separate themselves from other nationalities.
"They want to separate themselves from the other nationalities; the
Pakistanis, the Afghans, the Iraqis...what they say is that all these
other nationalities claim to be Syrians as well, because it is the
Syrians who have the most valid claim to asylum.
"They are refugees, they are fleeing civil war. Many of the others, they say, are economic migrants."
Violent clashes
Giorgos Kosmopoulos, the head of Amnesty International in
Greece, told Al Jazeera that the Macedonian police were treating
refugees as though they were rioters.
"Authorities must be able to make a distinction. These are people entitled to international protection," he said.
Police had first fired stun grenades and clashed with the refugees on
Friday, a day after Macedonia's government declared a state of
emergency on the frontier to deal with the issue.
Ivo Kotevsky, a spokesman for the interior ministry, told Al Jazeera
that the officers had not used violence against the refugees but had
been forced to take measures to protect themselves and the border.
Kotevsky said Macedonia was trying to do its best in protecting the refugees, who had been "practically expelled from Greece".
|
Desperate migrants in Macedonia fight for place on train
|
The refugees hope that by crossing to Macedonia they would be able to
take trains through Serbia to Hungary, an EU member, which has begun
erecting a fence to try to keep the distraught refugees out.
The UN refugee agency (UNHCR) urged the Macedonian government to do
more, saying it should allocate a site to accommodate people fleeing
war.
UNHCR spokesman Petros Mastakas told Al Jazeera that the refugees
included "hundreds of vulnerable persons, children, babies and those
with extreme vulnerabilities including medical needs.
"Most of them stay rough in the open air," he said.
|
A little girl cries as she tries to take shelter from the rain on Greece's border with Macedonia [Reuters] |
|
A Syrian refugee woman cries on her husbands arms as they wait to cross into Macedonia at the Greek-Macedonian border [Reuters] |
Source: Al Jazeera and agencies
copy http://www.aljazeera.com/
Nenhum comentário:
Postar um comentário