UNHCR head thanks Greece, frontline islands, for improved response to continuing arrivals
UNHCR chief António Guterres witnesses improved humanitarian response mounted by Greek local authorities and civil society
LESVOS, Greece (UNHCR) - In a weekend mission to the main EU entry point for nearly 450,000 refugees and migrants so far this year, UNHCR chief António Guterres witnessed the improved humanitarian response mounted by Greek local authorities and civil society while lamenting the continued lack of a large-scale and effective European response.
Assessing conditions on the Greek island of Lesvos, the main landing spot for tens of thousands of people taking smuggler boats from the nearby Turkish coast, Guterres said European governments had yet to match the "gigantic effort" that the island and its people had made in trying to cope with the huge influx.
"It is amazing that on a small island, you are managing, whereas in a big Europe, with half a billion people, they are finding it so difficult," Guterres told Lesvos Mayor Spyros Galinos and other Greek officials. "We are always saying this crisis is manageable at the European level, but to be manageable, it needs to be much better managed."
Without a Europe-wide approach and an effective strategy in dealing with the influx, Guterres warned, criminal networks would continue to thrive. "When states are not able to organize the orderly movement of refugees, smugglers take charge, exploiting people further and adding to their suffering," he added.
Describing his island as frontline, Mayor Galinos said: "the main issue is not the numbers, but the lack of a European policy to respond." Nevertheless, he said, Greeks would continue to do whatever they could to address the crisis and combat smugglers, "who not only exploit the people, but who put their lives at continuous risk."
"Above all, we are all human beings," the Mayor added. "We must all recognize the position of these people because we might all find ourselves in this situation one day."
UNHCR has deployed an emergency team to Greece and now has some 120 staff in the country to support the government in its effort to address the continuing crisis. The island of Lesvos, which according to the last census in 2011, had a population of 85,000 people, but is probably several thousand higher now, has received over 220,000 people in nine months. UNHCR figures put the number of arrivals in September alone at 160,000, while the Greek coast guard records show 110,000 people.
The majority of the refugees and migrants arriving on Lesvos are from Syria, Afghanistan and Iraq. The rest, about five per cent, are migrants and refugees from 21 countries as varied as India, Bangladesh, Togo, Niger, Columbia, Haiti and the Dominican Republic.
The Greek Coast Guard on Lesvos receives between five to 10 distress calls a day and then sets out to rescue people in overcrowded boats.
Deputy Harbour Master, Antonio Sofiadellis, a leader in the Greek Coast Guard effort that has saved between 240-400 refugee and migrant lives every day, said that more people are being packed onto the flimsy boats these days - around 60 when 50 used to be the limit.
"The engines are very cheap and the smugglers don't care that they don't know how to operate the boats. This is something no country in Europe has faced. If we weren't there to rescue them, half or more than half would drown. The boats capsize, some fold, when the floor breaks."
Guterres also visited the north of Lesvos, where most refugee boats land. The beaches were strewn with hundreds of bright orange life jackets and deflated rubber boats, soaked shoes and pieces of clothing. Some 1,050 people had arrived overnight and volunteers helped them to an assembly point nearby, where they found food and a warm place to sleep in a large UNHCR shelter.
Some Syrian refugees he met told him they had fled directly from Aleppo, Damascus or Homs. Other Syrians said they could no longer make ends meet in neighbouring countries amid cuts in humanitarian aid and restrictions on work. Most people said they felt now was their chance to find safety in European countries where refugees were welcome.
By Melissa Fleming, Lesvos, Greece
Related news and stories
Ukraine's refugees find long-term support in Europe's host countries
Women-run businesses in Afghanistan dealt a blow by deepening restrictions
Earthquake survivors in Türkiye count the devastating toll
Twelve years on, Syrian refugees face deepening debt and hunger
Twelve years on, Syrian refugees face deepening debt and hunger
UNHCR launches new appeal for Afghan refugees and hosts, urging partners to stay the course
Your search for « syria » matched 4302 results. Only the first 1,000 results are displayed. Displaying page 18 of 112 pages.
-
Syria: The journey to safety gets more dangerous by the day, but refugees keep coming
3 Sep 2013 ... - Before there was war, Hamid and his family lived just outside the city of Homs in western Syria. ... As of today, more than 2 million refugees have fled across Syria's borders to find shelter in Jordan ...... -
UN refugee agency welcomes Brazil announcement of humanitarian visas for Syrians
27 Sep 2013 ... According to the announcement, Brazil's embassies in countries neighbouring Syria will be ... humanitarian visas will also be provided to family members living in countries neighbouring Syria. ...... -
Greek couple offers a welcome haven to Syrian family
27 Apr 2016 ... ATHENS, Greece, April 27 (UNHCR) -The experience of one refugee mother from Syria, who fled war in ... ''My husband left Syria 18 months ago, as the conflict spread to our home town, and made his way to ...... -
Driven from their land, Syrian farmers scavenge to survive
14 Mar 2016 ... YABROUD, Syria, March 14 (UNHCR) - Until the bloody Syrian conflict caught up with them, Adnan's ... The family are among more than seven million people displaced by war within Syria, many of whom are ...... -
UNHCR questionnaire finds most Syrians arriving in Europe coming directly from Syria
8 Dec 2015 ... for a family member missing in Syria, and one in five had been separated from one or more family members in that country. The majority - 63 per cent - had fled Syria during 2015, and 85 per cent had ...... -
On the Road: One family's exhausting journey from Kobani to northern Iraq
29 Oct 2014 ... They join some 215,000 others who have arrived there since the start of Syria's civil war in 2011. ... The oldest member of the family, 60-year-old Luqman, had to be carried across the Syria-Turkey ...... -
A Wedding in Wartime
17 Sep 2013 ... 0 In Syria, I'm told, wedding celebrations can last up to a week – and sometimes even a month. The ... But for these two, bearing children is not something they even contemplate. Qassim, wounded in Syria...... -
The WhatsApp wedding
3 Jul 2015 ... With no end in sight to the human suffering inflicted by the war in Syria, it can feel like there is ... They grew up in the same neighbourhood of Dara'a City, in southern Syria, but had never met before ...... -
A childhood cut short by Syria's war
9 Jul 2015 ... Another 278,000 are seeking international protection in Europe. With no end in sight to Syria's war, the number of refugees will certainly continue to grow. A Childhood Cut Short by Syria's War: Ivra, ......