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Greece moves hundreds of asylum-seekers from crowded island camp

Greece moves hundreds of asylum-seekers from crowded island camp
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A view of the Moria camp for refugees and migrants and part of a makeshift camp set next to Moria, on the island of Lesbos, Greece, Sept. 19, 2018. (File/Reuters/Giorgos Moutafis)
Greece moves hundreds of asylum-seekers from crowded island camp
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A child sits outside a tent at a makeshift camp for refugees and migrants next to the Moria camp on the island of Lesbos, Greece, Sept. 1, 2019. (Reuters/Alkis Konstantinidis)
Greece moves hundreds of asylum-seekers from crowded island camp
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A migrant walks among tents at a makeshift camp for refugees and migrants next to the Moria camp on the island of Lesbos, Greece, Sept. 1, 2019. (File/Reuters/Alkis Konstantinidis)
Updated 02 September 2019

Greece moves hundreds of asylum-seekers from crowded island camp

Greece moves hundreds of asylum-seekers from crowded island camp

LESBOS, Greece: Greece began moving hundreds of asylum-seekers on Monday from a camp on the island of Lesbos that holds around four times the number of people it was built for.
Over 11,000 refugees and migrants, most of whom have fled war or poverty in the Middle East, Asia or Africa, are holed up at Moria in Europe’s biggest migrant camp.
Some 635 people, mostly families, boarded a passenger ship on Monday for facilities in northern Greece, and more were due to leave later in the day.
Moving asylum-seekers from island camps to the mainland is part of government measures announced on Aug. 31 to deal with the rising numbers. All of Greece’s five formal island camps are over capacity.
Moria, which is a disused military base, has been criticized by humanitarian organizations for its squalid living conditions.
It currently holds the highest number of people in three years and violence is not uncommon. An Afghan boy was killed in a fight there last month and women have told aid groups they often feel unsafe.
Greece is Europe’s main gateway for Syrian, Afghan and Iraqi asylum-seekers, and accounts for more than half of the 56,000 migrants who have landed on the Mediterranean’s northern shore this year.
The numbers are small compared to the nearly 1 million people who fled to northern Europe through Greece in 2015, as a deal between the EU and Ankara in March 2016 all but cut off the flow. But they have still piled pressure on Greek facilities.
About 7,000 people landed on Greece’s shores last month, the highest number since the deal was signed. Last Thursday alone, more than a dozen boats arrived with around 600 migrants, prompting the government’s Council for Foreign Affairs and Defense to hold an emergency session.
To curb the influx, Greece also plans to tighten its border controls and speed up deportations of rejected asylum-seekers.