Greece and the EU have lost control of the situation on the border with Turkey…it will have deadly consequences
Since Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan
announced that Turkey will be opening its borders for refugees who want to
cross into Greece and Europe, images depicting thousands of suffering people —
families with children amongst them — have adorned front pages and TV news.
The fear of a renewed refugee crisis, like the one
that saw more than one million people pass though Greece on their way to
northern Europe in 2015, had always been present since the EU and Turkey signed
a deal that would keep more than three million others from making the journey.
Now, with that deal effectively null and void, the
situation on the Greek border has become explosive. And what’s worse, the Greek
government seems to have lost control of the situation — with deadly
consequences.
The centre-right New Democracy and its leader
Kyriakos Mitsotakis, won the July 2019 elections promising solutions, while at
the same time blaming the incumbent Syriza administration of being too soft on
what they deemed were “illegal migrants”.
Syriza shares part of the blame: they went along
with the 2016 deal between Turkey and the EU, and were the administration that
established the camps in the Greek islands — camps like Moria in Lesvos that
have become hotspots.
But the mood the new administration created has
brought on new, and dangerous forms of reactionary politics. Their promise of
“closed detention facilities” was a non-solution that would simply make the
current situation in the islands — which are essentially now prisons — the
status-quo. The resistance from the population was understandable, but it has
now mutated to something which verges on the dystopian.
As refugees streamed to the borders, the army and
riot police were mobilised to stop them. Greece announced it won’t be accepting
any asylum claims for a month, and that all who cross the borders will be sent
back to Turkey immediately.
At least one person has died in the tension created
between the security forces and the refugees, with two independent
investigations by Forensic Architecture and Bellingcat, both suggesting the
projectile that killed him came from the Greek side. Meanwhile, a young child
was drowned just metres away from Lesvos, as a boat full of refugees was
approaching the island. Greece and Turkey have both blamed each other for the
violence.
Facebook groups organising “hunting parties” to
patrol the borders in Evros popped up. While its administrator was prosecuted,
it had hundreds of members before it was closed. Journalists, doctors and NGO
workers have been attacked by groups opposing any and all aid given towards
refugees in the islands of Lesvos and Chios. Far-right groups from Germany and
France have put out calls for their members to travel to Greece and participate
in these “hunts”. Some have reportedly already arrived.
As these
groups are accountable to no one, and publicly infiltrated and organised by
far-right activists in certain instances, legal order is taking a hit.
The EU, which is ultimately the only organisation
that can provide a solution, has so far proposed nothing that would alleviate
the situation, preferring instead to throw money at it. In this way, they are
admitting that they are comfortable with parts of Greece (and Italy) becoming permanent
prisons for those trying to reach the “core” EU countries. And the Greek
government is facing a situation over which they appear to have no control. The
appearance of far-right groups could easily prove to be the beginning of a much
darker chapter in the refugee crisis.
Erdogan will is set to met a number of EU officials
today, including Charles Michel, president of the EU leaders’ council, Ursula
von der Leyen, the head of the EU’s executive arm and Nato Secretary General
Jens Stoltenberg
It’s been said, time and time again, that this major
issue cannot be resolved with a competition between the EU and Turkey, about
who can help the refugees the least. And yet, that is precisely what Europe has
chosen to do