2 migrants shot on Lesbos Greek Island

Two asylum-seekers have been hospitalised with light
injuries after gunshots were fired into Greece’s largest migrant camp on the
eastern Aegean island of Lesbos.
The unknown assailant or assailants evaded arrest,
while the two injured migrants were taken to the island’s hospital as a
precaution, police said on Wednesday. No further detail was provided.
The shots took place as police had been called to
quell demonstrations taking place in and around the camp. Hundreds of mainly
male migrant protesters were angry that the Greek authorities were choosing to
transfer only a few thousand of the most vulnerable people out of the camps to
the mainland. The transfer was agreed upon in a bid to get the migrants out of
infection's way should the coronavirus spread through the overcrowded camps.
The protesters demanded that they too be transferred
to less crowded facilities on the Greek mainland. According to the news agency
dpa they held up placards demanding "freedom for all" and said that
they were being "exposed to COVID-19."
The two migrants injured by the gunshots were taken
to Lesbos' hospital "as a precaution," reported Ekahtimerini, adding
that "no further detail was supplied."
Breaking quarantine?
On Thursday morning, the news agency AFP reported
that the injured migrants came from Iran and Afghanistan respectively and were
shot because they were "openly trying to break the quarantine" and
lockdown measures imposed on inhabitants of the camp, as well as residents
throughout Greece.
However, later, dpa reported news from Greece's
public broadcaster ERT, which quoted
police sources which suggested the migrants had been shot about seven
kilometers away from Moria, with a hunting rifle. The migrants, claimed another
Greek website Stonisi, that they had been "going for a walk," when
the incident occurred.
Although the
motive for this attack has not been clarified, dpa also reported that in
March anti-migrant extremists had been known to attack migrants and
humanitarian workers on the island. They also said that theft had increased
around the Moria camp in recent years and is often reported. Again though,
there is no clear link to what the migrants may, or may not, have been doing
when they were shot at.
Humanitarian organizations like the UN refugee
agency UNHCR and Doctors without Borders (MSF) have long warned that were the
virus to take hold in the overcrowded migrant camps, it would be a disaster,
not just for the camp's inhabitants, but also for the rest of Europe too. There
are still more than 18,000 migrants present in and around Moria, in a camp
which was originally conceived for about 6,000.