Photo: Rafael Alvez/Flickr. Greek police treatment of migrants under scrutiny
Source: IRIN
BANGKOK, 17 August 2012 (IRIN) - Human rights groups have condemned
recent police crackdowns in Greece on undocumented migrants, inhumane
detention conditions, and hate crimes committed with impunity.
The Greek authorities began a crackdown on irregular migrants in the capital, Athens, in early August, when the police arrested 7,754 migrants, 1,656 of whom were taken to detention centres for being in the country illegally.
“Greece has the right to enforce its immigration laws and after a fair
process, to deport people with no legal basis to stay in the country,”
said Benjamin Ward, deputy director of the Europe and Central Asia
division of Human Rights Watch.
“But it doesn't have the right to treat people like criminals, or to
presume irregular immigration status just because of their race or
ethnicity.”
In the first quarter of 2012 some 64 percent of all irregular migrants
in the European Union (EU) entered through illegal border crossings from
Greece, according to the European Agency for the Management of
Operational Cooperation at the External Borders of the Member States of
the European Union (FRONTEX).
In 2010 irregular migrants made up almost 10 percent of Greece’s
population of 11 million - some 810,000 people - according to government
figures and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).
“As Greece seems to be the easier door to Europe, more and more people
will try to pass here,” commented Nikitas Kanakis, director of the
Athens-based NGO, Médecins du Monde (MDM), which runs a free health
clinic for undocumented migrants in the capital. “But the combination of
the lack of services and a [restrictive] immigration policy, with the
deep economic and social crisis [in Greece]… creates an unsafe
environment for migrants.”
Most of the irregular migrants in Greece are stranded there because they
do not have the money to move on, and a “dysfunctional” system for
processing asylum seekers, according to the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR). Only 2,860 of the more than 10,000 applications for asylum and 47,000 appeals filed in 2010 were successful.
The agency also noted that in the first half of 2011, the Greek
authorities arrested some 57,000 undocumented migrants, most of whom
were deported without any effort to assess their circumstances or
standing.
Migrants who escape arrest and deportation increasingly risk violence
and racism in a country that is suffering its worst economic crisis in
decades. “Undocumented migrants in Greece are not in a position to cover
many of their basic needs,” said Tassos Yphantis, a social worker at
MDM, which treated some 300 attack victims in the first half of 2011.
“Most of them are homeless or live in large groups in congested
apartments with no access to primary healthcare. Their everyday life is
guided by fear of arrest or attacks motivated by racism,” he said.
UNHCR, the National Commission for Human Rights, and 19 groups that constitute the Racist Violence Recording Network,
condemned a fatal attack on a young Iraqi on 12 August and called on
the government to end the impunity of hate-based crimes. Racist attacks
against migrants and refugees are “an almost daily phenomenon”, they
said.
A 16-year-old migrant, who escaped from Afghanistan when the Taliban
forcibly recruited his elder brother, reached Greece with the help of a
smuggler after 35 days of hard travel through Iran and Turkey. He was
given a six-month temporary permit after applying for asylum and now
lives in a public park in Athens with other Afghan migrants. “A bus
conductor removed by force my permit documents for not paying a bus
ticket,” he said. “When I protested I was taken to the police station
and my permit was confiscated.”.
Human rights groups have condemned the recent crackdown as discriminatory and have warned against inhumane detention conditions.
“Undocumented immigrants are normally held inside police stations, which
are indeed overcrowded and unable to accommodate the numbers we get,”
Christos Manouras, deputy lieutenant and spokesperson for the police,
told IRIN.
But things are changing. “Migrants are being transferred to newly built
detention centres [in Athens and also near the border with Turkey] to
avoid congesting police premises. Those detention centres follow
international standards and host migrants who do not qualify for asylum
and are awaiting repatriation.”
On 31 July, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) and the
Greek authorities signed an agreement to offer “assisted voluntary
return” to some 7,000 undocumented migrants in Greece in the next 12
months.
The US$12 million project, funded by the European Return Fund with 25
percent participation by the Greek government, will offer a small number
of migrants reintegration support in their home countries.
“Greece is under tremendous pressure from the influx of migrants
crossing our borders. It is not a Greek but a European problem, and
should be dealt with as such,” said police spokesperson Manouras. “The
assisted voluntary returns will help fight the organized crime of human
traffickers and ensure a dignified return for the migrants.”
While the EU wrestles over who should take responsibility for repatriations, migrants’ rights are at risk, said Kanakis of MDM.
“The economic crisis deeply affects the life of undocumented migrants,
and minimizes the public’s sympathy towards them… Authorities should
have a clear strategy on immigration and address simple measures such as
night shelters, baths, services for women and children,” he said.
“We need to organize simple effective repatriations and renegotiate with the EU. This is a European problem.”