Photo: Jodi Hilton/IRIN. Conditions at the abandoned schoolhouse are “sickening, disgusting and inhumane”, says UNHCR
Source: IRIN
SOFIA, 22 October 2013 (IRIN) - In an abandoned schoolhouse outside the
Bulgarian capital Sofia, 380 migrants and asylum seekers are living in
squalid conditions. They are part of a new wave of migrants and asylum
seekers, mostly Kurds from Syria, who have strained Bulgaria’s
inefficient asylum system to breaking point.
Plumbing problems plague the facility, and the smell of sewage wafts
through the corridors. Former classrooms are divided and shared by
several families. Walls are mouldy, windows broken and electricity
intermittent. Despite the cold weather, central heating has not yet been
turned on.
Cooking stoves are scarce, and there is no food refrigeration available.
Food stocks are donated sporadically by the Bulgarian Red Cross, but
nothing is provided regularly by the government.
“Sickening, disgusting and inhumane” is how Boris Cheshirkov,
spokesperson for the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) in Bulgaria, described
the schoolhouse, known as the Vrazhdebna facility, one of three
reception centres recently opened to accommodate a drastic increase in
asylum seekers in recent months.
The Bulgarian Helsinki Committee (BHC) went even further after visiting the facility.
“Such treatment of refugees is not only an emblematic example of the red
tape and indifference to the needs of people typical for Bulgarian
State institutions, but also constitutes inhuman and degrading treatment
and [a] display of white-collar cruelty of the highest order,” it said
in a statement, which sparked a public outcry.
In the reception centre at the State Agency for Refugees, Mizgin Abas,
26, a former English teacher, and her husband, Ferhad, 30, said they had
been forced to give up a home and decent jobs in Syria’s Kurdish
region. They fled with their children after hearing reports that
al-Qaeda-linked groups in a nearby village were beheading Kurdish Syrian
men and abducting Kurdish Syrian women.
“We preferred to come here and see a good life,” Mizgin said. They are
hoping to be granted protected status so that they can stay in Bulgaria.
About 100 people are arriving at Bulgaria’s border with Turkey daily,
and the numbers are rapidly increasing. In the past, Bulgaria received,
on average, 1,000 migrants and asylum seekers per year. This year alone,
more than 6,500 have arrived, leaving officials scrambling to find
housing and funds to accommodate them.
Arrivals have increased steadily since August, and at the current rate,
the Ministry of Interior estimates it will have received 11,000 to
15,000 by year’s end - the vast majority Syrian.
“We see that the government is overwhelmed, and that the reception capacity has been depleted,” said UNHCR’s Cheshirkov.
Smugglers who used to lead migrants from Turkey into Greece are increasingly moving them to Bulgaria instead, in part due to the construction of a 10.5km fence
at one of the most popular crossing points along the Turkish-Greek
border. Bulgaria, a tiny country of just 7.5 million people, is one of
the poorest in the European Union (EU).
“We are just at the beginning of this crisis,” Vasil Marinov, deputy minister of the interior, told IRIN.
Medical needs
When IRIN visited the schoolhouse last week, there were no
administrators or medical staff on site, just security and police
officers guarding the building (residents are allowed to come and go as
they please). But over the weekend, a newly hired director was on site
to greet a team of volunteer doctors.
The medical team, of the Do Good Initiative of Sofia’s Jewish community,
found that no medical care had been offered in the three weeks since
the residents were moved to Sofia from the border, despite the presence
of several pregnant women, elderly people and diabetes patients.
Respiratory ailments were widespread, which is common for people living
in close quarters, said Alexander Oscar, one of the volunteer doctors.
He and his team plan to visit all the reception centres, providing basic
medical care and treatment, including hospitalization. They plan to set
up weekly mobile clinic visits. Oscar said his team is also providing
recommendations to the government: “You cannot just leave people in
these conditions,” he said.
The majority of Syrians arriving in Bulgaria are escaping the recent
violence between rebel factions in northern Syria; al-Qaeda linked
groups have overtaken parts of the Kurdish region.
Many Kurds feel apprehensive about staying in their first country of
refuge, Turkey, because of domestic politics: A Turkish Kurdish
separatist movement, the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), has been
fighting the Turkish government for decades. Refugee camps in southern
Turkey provide shelter mainly for Sunni Syrians. Other minority groups,
such as Kurds, Alawis and Christians, have been mostly left to their own
devices or are helped by co-religionists. Some of the Syrian Kurds who
have arrived in Bulgaria say they are trying to reunite with family
members in Western Europe.
Sleeping in corridors
In Bulgaria, newly arrived migrants and asylum seekers - those who have
yet to submit a formal asylum application - are detained in a closed
facility and treated as suspected criminals for having crossed the
border irregularly, a process UNHCR describes as “additional trauma for
victims of violence”.
After the asylum claims are registered - which can take as much as one
year - they are moved to dormitory-style reception centres with freedom
of movement. They have the right to remain there until their asylum case
is heard and possibly appealed, which can take up to three years.
But the country’s current capacity of just 3,350 beds at state-run
detention and reception centres is stretched to the limit, exacerbated
by the sluggish processing time for registering and processing asylum
applications. As a result, more than 900 people are currently living in
the main reception centre in Sofia at the State Agency for Refugees,
which was built with a 600-person capacity.
“For the last two months, all the rooms have been filled, and people
have been sleeping on cots set up in the corridors,” said Elena
Dimitrova, spokesperson for the State Agency for Refugees.
“Unfortunately,” she said, “there are too many of them. There is not enough money, food and no administration capacity.”
With EU funding, the government plans to upgrade substandard facilities
and open new reception centres. A temporary facility made of trailers
opened last week in the south-central town of Harmanli; it is meant to
accommodate 450 people.
But the government’s priority, Dimitrova and Marinov said, is to speed
up the registration process for those seeking asylum or subsidiary
protection. (Asylum is offered to those fleeing persecution in their
home country, whereas those fleeing generalized conflict or the prospect
of the death penalty or torture if returned to their home countries may
be granted what is known as subsidiary protection.)
As such, the government plans to hire additional staff in order to
reduce the initial application time to 21 days, thus moving people out
of detention centres faster.
Backlash
The Bulgarian government estimates that each asylum seeker costs the
country 1,084 Bulgarian leva per month (US$758), mostly in
administration and facility costs. When this number was reported by
Bulgarian media, many people misunderstood this to mean that asylum
seekers received this money directly. Instead, registered asylum seekers
receive 65 leva ($45) per month to cover food, medical and other
expenses.
A backlash against the arrival of several thousand migrants and asylum
seekers has come from both the nationalist party Ataka and the
opposition party of former Prime Minister Boyko Borisov, who has been
pressuring the government to control the borders more effectively.
In response, the government unveiled a plan last week to build a 30km
fence along a stretch of the Bulgarian-Turkish border that is difficult
to patrol as it crosses a thick forest in the Strandzha Mountains. The
government hopes the fence will ensure the points of entry are places
where migrants can be more easily detected and apprehended. Where
officials find no basis for asylum or protection, people have been
jailed or deported.
“We fled because everyone was killing each other, and children were
being kidnapped and sold,” said Zahra Omar Abdelatif, from Qamishli,
Syria. Even if one had money, it was becoming impossible to buy food and
necessities, she added.
The Abdelatif family paid smugglers $2,000 to get from Syria to the
Bulgarian border. From there, they walked four or five hours across
rough terrain. Now the family of five shares a room with seven other
people in the former schoolhouse. Between them, they have three
mattresses and a few dirty blankets. Her young children - ages 5, 3 and 1
- have not been feeling well, she said.
While the Bulgarian government is struggling to manage what it calls a
crisis, civil society groups are stepping in to fill the gap. Last week,
the Friends of the Immigrants group distributed 3,000 leva ($2,098)
worth of food and 1,800 leva ($1,259) of shoes to 700 people living at
Patrogor, a reception centre near the Turkish border. The Facebook
group, which began with about 40 friends, now has about 2,000 members.
Non-Syrians forgotten
Still, an increasing number of migrants and asylum seekers are living on
the streets or in makeshift accommodation. Asylum-seekers can waive
their right to shelter and a stipend if they state they can support
themselves and produce a document proving they have an external address.
People desperate to get out of overcrowded reception centres often buy
such documents on the black market, said Deniza Georgieva of the
Bulgarian Helsinki Committee. UNHCR’s Cheshirkov says many of the 2,500
people now living on their own “are at risk of becoming homeless if they
run out of money.”
In addition, recognized refugees have only a matter of days to move out
of reception centres once their applications are successful, at which
time they stop receiving monthly stipends and risk becoming destitute.
They are entitled to receive a housing allowance for up to six months
after they move out, but Georgieva said the State Agency for Refugees
stopped paying for housing assistance last June, since it had run out of
funds. “We have many families on the street because they don't have
alternatives,” she explained.
On a cold and damp day last week, half a dozen Afghans, including men,
women and two very young children, gathered around a fire in an
unfinished cement building lacking water and electricity. The squat,
which migrants have ironically named “Hotel Ritz”, is now home to
Iraqis, Afghans, Pakistanis, Palestinians and Somalis.
At night as many as 20 people sleep there on thin mattresses on cold
floors, exposed to the wind, according to Mohammad Ali Mohammad, a
Somali whose application for asylum has been stuck in Bulgaria’s asylum
system for three years.
“African immigrants are in the worst situation,” explained Bulgarian
journalist Dimiter Kenarov. “They are discriminated against and feel
increasingly isolated and left behind because all the aid is going to
the Syrians,” he said.
“UNHCR reminds that people are fleeing persecution and armed conflicts
from other parts of the world as well, and there shouldn't be
discrimination based on origin,” Cheshirkov said.