Greece migrant crisis: Refugee centre ablaze as tensions rise
A fire has ripped through a refugee shelter on the
Greek island of Lesbos as tensions over a surge in migration from Turkey
continue to rise.
Flames engulfed the One Happy Family centre, near
the island's capital Mitilini, on Saturday.
It is not clear how the fire started. No causalities
have been reported.
In recent days, there has been hostility towards
migrants on Lesbos after an increase in arrivals from Turkey.
Hundreds of migrants have attempted to reach the
island since Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said last week he was
"opening the doors" for refugees to enter Europe.
But on Saturday, Mr Erdogan partially reversed his
position. He ordered the Turkish coastguard to stop migrants from crossing the
Aegean Sea to Greece because it is unsafe to do so.
The EU has accused Mr Erdogan of using migrants for
political purposes. It insists its doors are "closed".
Meanwhile, clashes have again erupted at the land
border between Greece and Turkey.
There appears to have been no change in Turkey's
position with regard to letting migrants try to enter Greece via this route.
On Saturday, Greek police fired tear gas at crowds
at the border crossing at Kastanies, who responded by throwing stones and
shouting "open the gates", according to the AFP news agency.
The Greek authorities also accused Turkish police of
firing tear gas at its police.
Earlier on Saturday, Greek Migration Minister Notis
Mitarachi announced fresh restrictions on asylum seekers designed to stem the
flow of migration from Turkey.
"Accommodation and benefits for those granted
asylum will be interrupted within a month. From then on, they will have to work
for a living," the minister said.
"This makes our country a less attractive
destination for migration flows."
What's the background?
In 2016, a deal was reached whereby Turkey would
stop allowing migrants to reach the EU in return for funds from the bloc to
help it manage the huge numbers of refugees it hosts.
But since then, tensions between the EU and Turkey
have flared on various issues. In recent weeks, a fierce onslaught by Syrian
forces and their Russian backers on Idlib, the last province held by Syrian
rebels, has led to clashes with Turkey, which supports some rebel groups.
Turkey already hosts some 3.7m Syrians but the conflict
in Idlib has led to nearly a million more fleeing to its southern border.
Although the EU promised billions more euros in aid,
Turkey was unimpressed and last week decided to open its borders with Greece
and even bussed migrants close to the north-western border.
Greece said that the migrants were being
"manipulated as pawns" by Turkey in an attempt to exert diplomatic
pressure.
It has halted for a month all asylum claims from
migrants who enter Greece illegally, and taken aggressive measures to deter
them from entering via both land and sea.
In a 24-hour period to Saturday morning, more than
1,200 migrants attempted to cross the land border, most from Afghanistan and
Pakistan, an official source told Reuters news agency.
The EU's foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell, has
told refugees to "avoid moving to a closed door".
The BBC has encountered members of self-styled
militias who carry out night-time armed patrols in Greek border towns looking
for migrants.
"There are such militia along the entire region,"
said Yannis Laskarakis, a newspaper publisher in the city of Alexandroupoli who
has received death threats for speaking out against armed vigilantes.
"We have seen them with our own eyes, arresting
migrants, treating them badly and if someone dares to help them, he has the
same fate."