AFP, IDOMENI, Greece: Hundreds of Greek police Tuesday began clearing the overcrowded Idomeni camp, a migrant flashpoint where thousands of desperate refugees have been living for months in squalid conditions. The overcrowded and muddy camp on the Macedonia border has become a potent symbol of the human suffering and chaos as Europe struggles to cope with its worst migrant crisis since World War II. In an operation that began shortly after sunrise, Greek police put more than 1,000 people on buses to newly opened camps near Greece’s second city Thessaloniki, about 80 kilometres (50 miles) to the south. “The operation ... is taking place slowly and in a calm atmosphere. There has not been any need to use force,” government migration spokesman Yiorgos Kyritsis told AFP.
Most media were kept at a distance, but footage and images handed out by state TV ERT and state agency ANA, who were allowed access, showed migrants queueing up to board buses and being driven away, some waving at the camera. Many carried their worldly goods in huge bin bags, while others piled belongings into pushchairs, watched at a distance by groups of dark blue-clad police in white helmets. A group of children—one of them a young boy who struggled over the bumpy ground in a wheelchair—played nearby as they waited for their turn to leave. Authorities said priority would be given to unaccompanied minors and single-parent families. The transfer comes after a brutal winter of freezing rain and mud which saw many people trying to force their way across the border, sometimes resulting in violent encounters with the Macedonian police. Around midday, bulldozers moved in to clear out tents, according to tweets from activists at the camp.
Many in the camp are fleeing war, persecution and poverty in the Middle East and Asia. And Doctors Without Borders (MSF) representative Vicky Markolefa told AFP there was “high insecurity” and “an increase in stress” for the migrants who are “not fully aware of where they are going and what will come for them in the next days.” In Geneva, the UN refugee agency said it was sending additional staff to help the process. “It’s important that organised movements are voluntary, non-discriminatory, and based on well-informed choices by the individuals at the moment,” UNHCR spokesman Adrian Edwards told reporters. However Markolefa noted that a police cordon thrown around the camp—mainly to keep media out—had also prevented access for many humanitarian workers.