By Tania Karas February 9, 2016
Reuters
IDOMENI, Greece — The
European Union’s weakest link could become an open-air refugee camp if some
European leaders get their way. Amid concerns that Greece is failing to protect
Europe’s external frontier, calls have grown louder to quarantine it by helping
Macedonia seal its southern border — which refugees must cross to continue
their journeys north — and suspend Greece from the EU’s passport-free Schengen
zone.
Such
proposals would effectively ring-fence Greece from the rest of the EU,
trapping tens of thousands of asylum-seekers in a politically and economically
fragile country with neither the infrastructure nor funds to care for them.
Most migrants know this. Hence, Greece
has never been their destination. It is merely a conduit to more affluent
nations deeper into the continent.
More walls
around Europe will not stop them. Rather, they
will find other routes or be driven further underground.
The Greek border
town of Idomeni offers a glimpse into what Greece ’s refugee crisis will become if the
country is cut off from the rest of Europe .
The border crossing and transit camp, located along the railway tracks
connecting Greece and Macedonia, has emerged as a tense choke point for
migrants traveling northwest through the Balkans.
Smugglers
controlled this area long before Europe ’s
migration crisis exploded last year. Those mafias “disappeared totally” last
summer, when Balkan nations including Macedonia began allowing all
asylum-seekers 72 hours to traverse their countries legally, according to Antonis Rigas, a field
coordinator for Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) at Idomeni. For the first time,
a “humanitarian corridor” to Germany
was open, and the route arguably safer than ever before. It was chaos, of
course, but controlled chaos, with tens of thousands entering and exiting Greece in a
matter of days.
That all
ended in late November. In a bid to keep out “economic migrants,” Macedonia and
other western Balkan countries said they would admit only Syrians, Afghans and
Iraqis, who are likelier to fall under the legal definition of a refugee. Greece had no say in this nationality-based
filter of questionable legality — and it had no choice but to deal with the thousands
stranded in Greece
because of it. At Idomeni, violent protests broke out among the thousands of
“others,” who came from countries such as Morocco ,
Iran , and Somalia . And
smuggling activity has roared back, aid workers and volunteers say.
Meanwhile,
some European leaders have already given up on Greece
and are setting their sights on Macedonia
and Bulgaria .
Hungary and Austria are calling for reinforcement of the
barbed-wire fence Macedonia
built at Idomeni last fall. It is already causing bottlenecks of several
thousand people on the Greek side as Macedonia opens and closes the
crossing randomly, without warning.
This is how
Greece , the entry point into
Europe for more than 850,000 asylum-seekers
last year, is already becoming a vast holding pen. It can do little to deter
refugee boats from reaching its 8,498 miles of coastline — the longest in Europe . Once they reach Greek territorial waters,
“pushbacks” would violate international law.
But if
Idomeni is any indication, an era of closed European borders will just push
those trapped in Greece
to try ever more dangerous routes to get out. Groups like the UNHCR and
International Organization for Migration encourage those blocked from traveling
through Macedonia under the
nationality-based filter policy to return to Athens , where they can apply for asylum or
return to their home countries voluntarily. Determined to move on, many stay at
Idomeni, sleeping in abandoned buildings or fields as they attempt to cross the
border covertly.
Further,
blaming Greece for Europe’s
migration woes ignores the roots of the problem, in particular Syria ’s ongoing
war. Criminal networks in Turkey
reaped millions sending refugees and migrants to Europe
last year. The EU’s 3 billion-euro deal with Turkey
to stop migration flows has made little difference in the number of arrivals to
Greece
so far. Severing the Balkan route at the Greece-Macedonia border without first
stopping boats from leaving Turkish shores is playing directly into the hands
of smugglers in Europe .
Another
major problem is the lack of legal alternatives for refugees to reach Europe — or move within it once they arrive. The
EU-Turkey deal focuses on keeping refugees in Turkey
rather than letting them come to Europe
safely. And the EU’s relocation scheme, which pledged to move 160,000
asylum-seekers from Greece
and Italy
to other European countries, has moved only 481 so far, the European Commission
reports. Because of its slowness, few asylum-seekers choose to participate.
According to the Greek asylum service, only 13 countries have made relocation
slots available. So before Europe talks about walling off Greece , the
relocation program, if it is to work, needs to be sped up and other EU members
pushed to shoulder their share of the burden.
Further, Greece cannot afford food, medical care and
shelter for those who would be stranded if its border with Macedonia is
permanently sealed. The country has already spent more than 2 billion euros on
the refugee crisis in the past two years. Six years of austerity have left it
unable to provide medical and social services to many of its own citizens, let
alone hundreds of thousands of foreigners who would be trapped indefinitely if
its border was sealed.
For
refugees escaping war and persecution, reaching their destinations in Europe
amid ever more restrictive border policies is “like a video game,” said Faye Karavasili,
an attorney from Vienna who quit her job to
volunteer with refugees in northern Greece . “They fight their way
through, but then they get to the next level and it’s a new set of obstacles.”
By
circumstance of its geography, Greece
is the frontline of Europe ’s migrant crisis.
Ring-fencing it from the rest of the continent will not help it, nor will it do
anything toward solving the largest mass movement of people since World War
Two.
The
challenge for Europe , then, is to transcend
the loud, populist rhetoric of a few self-interested states. It must work with Turkey to cut
down on smuggling networks and provide incentives for refugees to remain there
under humane circumstances. Otherwise Europe will have another humanitarian
crisis on its hands in Greece .
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