Little left of Greece’s Moria refugee camp after 2nd fire
Little remained of Greece’s notoriously overcrowded
Moria refugee camp Thursday after a second fire overnight destroyed nearly
everything that had been spared in the original blaze, leaving thousands more
people in need of emergency housing.
Early morning saw former residents of the country’s
largest camp, which had been under coronavirus lockdown, return to the area to
pick through the charred remains of their belongings, salvaging what they
could. Many spent the night sleeping in the fields, by the side of the road or
in a small graveyard.
New, small fires also sprang up in the remains of
tents set up outside the camp, fanned by strong winds Thursday morning.
Authorities said both fires in the camp on the
island of Lesbos were deliberately started, with the first one Tuesday evening
set by residents angered by quarantine measures imposed to contain a COVID-19
outbreak after 35 people tested positive.
That blaze had left about 3,500 of the more than
12,500 people living in and around Moria homeless, and authorities flew in
tents and were providing a ferry and two navy ships as emergency temporary
housing.
But new fires sprang up in the undamaged parts of
the camp Wednesday evening, destroying the greater part of what was left and
sending thousands more streaming out of the facility.
Greek government spokesman Stelios Petsas said the
second fire was also deliberately set and had now left the vast majority of the
camp’s residents homeless.
“Some people do not respect the country that is
hosting them, and they strive to prove they are not looking for a passport to a
better life,” Petsas told reporters in Athens.
He said those who had set the fires “did so because
they considered that if they torch Moria, they will indiscriminately leave the
island. We tell them they did not understand. They will not leave because of
the fire.”
Petsas said the only Moria residents who would be
allowed to leave Lesbos were the 406 unaccompanied children and teenagers who
were flown to northern Greece overnight.
Apart from the main camp, Moria also consisted of a
sprawling tent city that had sprung up in olive groves outside the main
perimeter fence due to overcrowding. Much of that was burned beyond repair by Thursday
morning, with just the blackened frames of tents remaining among charred olive
tree trunks.
Aid agencies have long warned of dire conditions at
Moria, a facility built to house just over 2,750 people. The camp accommodates
people fleeing conflict and poverty in the Middle East, Africa and Asia who
arrive clandestinely on Lesbos from the nearby Turkish coast, and has become a
symbol of what critics say is Europe’s failure to humanely handle the migration
and refugee situation.
“Greece has been left alone to deal with thousands
of people coming in our country. Lately we have applied a policy of strict
control of the borders, with the help of European forces, and this policy has
worked,” Greek European Affairs Minister Miltiadis Varvitsiotis told members of
the European Parliament’s Foreign Affairs Committee in Brussels Thursday.
Varvitsiotis said Europe’s new migration policy
should focus on giving shelter to those who need asylum, prevent unauthorized
migrants from entering, and repatriate people stuck in camps back to their
homes.
Europe, he said, should send a message to islands
and other outlying areas that they are not doomed to live on the borders of the
European Union. “They shouldn’t have to tolerate behavior that is
unacceptable,” he said.
In Athens, the migration ministry said that when the
second fire struck Wednesday, work was being carried out in Moria to ensure no
families remained homeless overnight. But the new blaze forced the work to
stop.
During Thursday, “all necessary actions will be
taken to house initially the vulnerable and families in specially designated
areas,” the ministry said.
Meanwhile, a group of locals angered by the
situation and the presence of the camp in their area blocked a secondary road
leading to the camp in an effort to prevent access to equipment that could be
used to rebuild.
Moria has long been considered a sad and
embarrassing symbol of European migration policy failures.
In coming weeks, European Commission Vice President
Margaritis Schinas, who is responsible for migration affairs, and EU Migration
Commissioner Ylva Johansson are due to unveil a new “pact on migration,” aimed
at ending years of dispute over which countries should be responsible for
managing migrant arrivals and whether their partners should be obliged to help.
French President Emmanuel Macron said he had spoken
with Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis and German Chancellor Angela
Merkel on Wednesday.
“There is a terrible reality with these fires. Many
children, women, men are in these camps in absolutely terrible conditions. We
want to show solidarity with Greece that lives up to European values.,” Macron
said.
France was aiming to propose to take in some of the
minors in the camps, he said.
“The coming hours will allow us to finalize the
needs, in coordination with the Greeks, and a first, coordinated French-German
response, in hopes of bringing along a maximum of other European Union
countries in this solidarity,” Macron said.
Since well over 1 million people entered Europe in
2015 — most of them refugees fleeing conflict in Syria and Iraq — the row over
responsibility and solidarity has blown up into one of the EU’s biggest ever
political crises.



