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Greece's Biggest Refugee Camp Evacuated

  • A refugee child and adult warm themselves next to a bonfire by tents near the village of Idomeni, Greece.

    A refugee child and adult warm themselves next to a bonfire by tents near the village of Idomeni, Greece. | Photo: Reuters

Published 24 May 2016
Opinion

Greek authorities have started moving more than 8,000 people out of the camp.

Greece sent in riot police Tuesday to relocate around 8,400 people from the country's largest refugee camp in Idomeni to new camps after those living in the camp refused to move voluntarily.

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The refugees said the newedly organized camps will move them further away from the border.

The operation began around dawn Tuesday when about 20 riot police units, 400 police in total started to transfer people on buses.

The Greek government and police officials said that people would be moved gradually but force would not be used, according to the Guardian.

Greek policemen operate at a makeshift camp for migrants and refugees at the Greek-Macedonian border near the village of Idomeni, Greece. Photo: Reuters

Buses take refugees to newly built camps. Photo: AFP​

Giorgos Kyritsis, Greek government spokesman for the refugees crisis, said that all of the migrants in the camp would be moved to camps near Thessalonki, Greece’s second biggest city.

“A thing like Idomeni cannot be maintained. It only serves the interests of smugglers … removing all the refugees from the disgrace which is Idomeni is in their own interests.”

The makeshift camp located in northern Greece, close to the Macedonian border started as an informal pedestrian border crossing for refugees heading towards Europe. It then filled with an over 8,000 people in February after border closures with Macedonia.

Since then other Balkan countries have also closed their borders. Most of those in the camp are refugees stranded from conflicts raging in Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan.

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Journalists were not allowed in the area, but buses carrying police and a police helicopter were reported.

It was reported Monday that police started evacuating about 2,000 people who have been blocking a rail track for more than a month, forcing trains to divert through Bulgaria.

More than 800,000 refugees have travelled through Greece since 2015, according to U.N. estimates, generating a refugee crisis in the region. Greece is one of the main points of entry to Europe for Syrian refugees.

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