Long lines of migrants, many of them refugees from Syria, snaked through
southern Serbia by foot on Monday before jumping on trains and buses
north to Hungary and the last leg of an increasingly desperate journey
to western Europe.
State authorities and aid agencies threw up tents and scrambled to
supply food and water to thousands surging through the western Balkans,
their numbers swelling since Greece began ferrying migrants from
overwhelmed islands to the mainland.
Visiting the Macedonian-Greek border, Austrian Foreign Minister Sebastian Kurz said the situation in the Balkans was “dramatic”.
“We urgently need coordinated action across Europe,” he told ORF radio.
In Serbia, Red Cross official Ahmet Halimi said 8,000 migrants had
registered in the southern town of Presevo over the past 24 hours.
Many had spent three desperate days on Greece’s northern border after
Macedonia halted their passage saying it could take no more. But on
Saturday, crowds braved batons and stun grenades to storm through police
lines.
Helpless to stem the tide, Macedonia rushed trains and buses to the
border to carry them north, where they crossed into Serbia on foot.
More arrived on Monday, walking from the border crossing of Miratovac
some 5 km (3 miles) to a reception centre in Presevo, where many
received medical aid, food and papers legalising their transit through
the country.
Most carried their belongings in rucksacks. Men carried small children
on their shoulders, hats shielding their heads from the August sun.
After a chilly night, daytime temperatures were expected to near 30
degrees Celsius (86°F).
“I just want to cross to continue my journey,” said Ahmed, from Syria,
on the Serbian border. “My final destination is Germany, hopefully.”
"OVERRUN, OVERWHELMED"
Not since the wars of Yugoslavia’s collapse in the 1990s has the
cash-strapped western Balkans seen such large movements of people, when
many Bosnians, Croats, Albanians and Serbs displaced by fighting fled
for the rich countries of Europe - the likes of Germany, Austria and
Sweden.
The problem threatens to get worse as EU member Hungary, part of
Europe’s borderless Schengen zone, races to complete a fence along its
175-km border with Serbia to keep the migrants out, threatening to
create a dangerous bottleneck.
The European Union, the migrants' only destination, has struggled to formulate and implement a common policy.
Kurz criticised the Greeks, whose borders form part of the EU’s external
frontier, for failing to process asylum requests on Greek soil as per
EU rules. A record 50,000 migrants, many of them Syrians crossing by
boat from Turkey, hit Greek shores in July, straining the resources of a
country going through one of the worst economic crises of modern times.
On Monday, two people drowned and five were believed missing when a
dinghy carrying migrants capsized off the Greek island of Lesbos, where
aid groups say 1,500 have been arriving daily for the past week.
The Greek government has chartered a car ferry to collect them from the
islands and bring them to the mainland on a daily basis. It carried
2,500 people, mainly Syrians, on Monday to Athens, where buses awaited
to take them north.
“It is not just a case of Greece not processing those (asylum) claims,
but they are actively doing their very best to get the refugees to move
on to central Europe as soon as possible,” Kurz said.
“The Western Balkan countries are overrun, overwhelmed and have been
left to their own devices,” Austria’s APA news agency quoted Kurz as
saying. “We have to help them.”
Germany says it expects a record 750,000 asylum-seekers to arrive this
year, in a crisis overwhelming authorities in Europe from the Greek
islands to the French port of Calais.
Fleeing war and poverty in the Middle East, Africa and Asia, many have
undertaken dangerous journeys across sea and land in search of safety
and employment in the affluent nations of western and northern Europe.
The UNHCR urged the EU to do more. The problem, said UNHCR Europe Bureau
Director Vincent Cochetel, “will not go away any time soon and affects
all of Europe.”
In the past two weeks, over 23,000 have entered Serbia, taking the total so far this year to some 90,000.
Asked how aid agencies and authorities were handling the influx, Ivan
Miskovic of Serbia’s Commissariat for Refugees and Migration said:
“They’re coping somehow so far.”
Migrants in 'dramatic' entry into Europe via Balkans
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