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Thousands of migrants look for way around shut Greek border

Refugees and migrants make their way through Edirne, Turkey
Refugees and migrants make their way through Edirne, Turkey, on Tuesday in hopes of crossing the border into Greece.
(Getty Images)
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Thousands of migrants and refugees searched for ways to cross Greece’s border with Turkey on Tuesday, as Athens ramped up its diplomatic efforts for help from the European Union to seal off its eastern land and sea frontiers.

Turkey has made good on a threat to open its borders for those seeking to cross into Europe. Many seeking to enter Greece, which has made clear its border is shut, were trying their luck by wading or rowing across the Evros River that runs along most of the land frontier.

The action by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan triggered days of violent clashes and scenes of chaos at the land border, while hundreds of others have headed to Greek islands from the nearby Turkish coast in dinghies. Greece has struggled to push back the wave of migrants, with its armed forces now leading the effort.

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Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis toured the troubled border along with top EU officials, including European Commission head Ursula von der Leyen and European Council President Charles Michel.

Mitsotakis said Turkey was breaching a 2016 agreement with the EU on migration and “has systematically encouraged and assisted tens of thousands of refugees and migrants to illegally enter Greece. It has failed, and will continue to fail, should it continue to pursue this strategy.”

“This is no longer a refugee problem. This is a blatant attempt by Turkey to use desperate people to promote its geopolitical agenda,” he said.

The government has called the situation a direct threat to Greece’s national security and imposed emergency measures to carry out summary deportations and freeze asylum applications for one month. Migrants have been reporting being summarily pushed back across the border into Turkey.

The Greek army and navy held live fire exercises across the eastern border areas for a second day Tuesday to reinforce the message of deterrence.

Greek authorities said they had prevented 26,532 people from entering Greece between Saturday morning and Tuesday afternoon, and arrested 218.

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“The Greek worries are our worries,” Von der Leyen said. “This is not only a Greek border, but it is also a European border, and I stand here today as a European at your side.” She said those at the borders had ”been lured by false promises into this desperate situation.”

Turkey’s announcement Thursday that it would not stop those wishing to cross into Europe came amid a Russian-backed Syrian government offensive into Syria’s northwestern Idlib province, where Turkish troops are fighting.

The offensive has killed dozens of Turkish troops and sent nearly a million Syrian civilians toward Turkey’s sealed border. However, Oleg Zhuravlev, head of the Russian military’s coordination center in Syria, said Tuesday that the claims about a humanitarian crisis in Idlib were false.

The announcement on Turkey’s opening of its borders upended Ankara’s previous policy of containing refugees under a 2016 agreement with the European Union, in which the EU would provide billions of dollars in funding for the care of refugees within Turkey.

Turkey, which hosts more than 3.5 million Syrian refugees, has long maintained the EU has not honored the deal.

But European countries say that is not the case.

“Turkey’s use of migrants as a means of pressure and blackmail on Europe is absolutely unacceptable,” French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian told lawmakers in Paris.

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“We reached an accord in March 2016. This accord should be respected,” he said. “It is respected by Europe.... It should also be respected by Turkey, especially because the financial commitments [to Turkey] are significant.”

Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz leveled blunt criticism at Turkey for the crisis.

“The people are being used by President Erdogan as a political football, as weapons and as instruments of pressure on the European Union,” he said in Vienna.

Von der Leyen said EU border protection agency Frontex would send an offshore vessel and three coastal patrol vessels, two helicopters and other aircraft, three thermal-vision vehicles and add 100 border guards to the 530 it already has in Greece. The EU would also provide about $780 million in
assistance.

The movement of migrants has appeared well organized, with buses, minibuses and cars provided in Istanbul, Turkey, to ferry people to the border. The vast majority appeared to be Afghans, along with people from a wide variety of other countries, including Syrians.

Human rights groups said the Greek response, while justified, has been heavy-handed. “Showing humanity and defending rights is the best way to defend the EU borders,” said Lotte Leicht, EU director at Human Rights Watch.

U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi said he understood Greece may need to take “decisive” and “exceptional” measures, but warned “access has to remain” for those in need of protection.

At the border, Greek authorities said the main pressure Tuesday had moved from the official crossing to points farther south along the border. Authorities said they thwarted an attempt by about 1,000 people overnight to make their way across the Evros wetlands, at the southern end of the border.

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People have also been trying to reach Greek islands from the nearby Turkish coast. A young boy died Monday after the dinghy he was in capsized off the island of Lesbos.

Greece’s coast guard said 519 people reached nine Greek islands in the 24 hours between Monday and Tuesday morning, a sharp drop from the nearly 1,000 people who had arrived the previous day.

The Greek navy said it was sending a transport ship to Lesbos to temporarily house up to 400 migrants, following tension with residents who have refused to allow new arrivals to reach the island’s already massively overcrowded migrant camp.

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