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Thousands of Afghans stranded in Greece

By AFP - Feb 22,2016 - Last updated at Feb 22,2016

IDOMENI,  Greece — Thousands of migrants were left stranded in Greece Monday after the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia abruptly closed it border to Afghans, creating a fresh bottleneck as European countries scramble to respond to the continent's worst refugee crisis since World War II.

Overall, some 8,000 people were trapped on Greece's northern frontier and at the port of Piraeus after the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia introduced the measure on Sunday in a bid to stem an unrelenting influx of migrants.

Desperate to get through, hundreds of Afghans staged a sit-down protest in an area of no-man's land and occupied the railway line connecting the two countries, holding makeshift signs that read: "We can't go back" and "Why racism?"

Dozens of Afghan children also carried signs with the words: "Help us cross border."

Greece said it would provide emergency shelter for the blocked migrants while working to find a solution with non-European Union member the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia.

Since November, countries on the Balkan route have allowed only Syrians, Iraqis and Afghans to continue their journey up towards Germany, Sweden and other European nations where they plan to apply for asylum.

The Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia’s decision to stop letting Afghans through came just two days after Austria controversially introduced a daily limit on asylum applications.

'Die or go on' 

"We cannot go back. We will either die here or go on," said 20-year-old Afghan Mohamed Asif on the Greek side of the border.

"We have paid so much money to get this far. Germany said it would accept refugees, what has changed now?"

Greece's Junior Interior Minister for Migration Yiannis Mouzalas said Athens was racing to negotiate an end the deadlock.

"We have begun diplomatic moves... we believe the problem will be resolved," Mouzalas told parliamentary television.

In an interview with Vima radio he added that Athens was trying to exert pressure at the "European and bilateral level", without giving further details.

However, another government source said it was unlikely the situation would be resolved on Monday.

"We do not expect a solution today," the source told AFP, adding: "We will accommodate the Afghans whilst trying to prevent overcrowding at any of the facilities available."

Officials said they would open a newly-completed relocation camp near Piraeus to handle the emergency.

The arrival last year of more than one million refugees and migrants in Europe, many fleeing war, poverty and persecution, has caused a chain reaction of border clampdowns, in a blow to the European Union's border-free Schengen zone.

As the main gateway into the bloc, Greece has been struggling to cope with the inflow and fears new restrictions by other members will leave tens of thousands stranded on its territory.

Austrian move 'unacceptable' 

German Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere on Sunday hit out at the asylum cap imposed by neighbouring Austria, which is now planning its own mini-summit with western Balkan leaders on Wednesday.

De Maiziere told ARD public television that Vienna's move to accept only 80 asylum seekers a day while waving through another 3,200 migrants, many of whom were headed for Germany, was "unacceptable".

De Maiziere said he intended bringing up the issue at the next gathering of EU interior ministers in Brussels on Thursday.

Greece thought it had secured an open-borders pledge from fellow EU members at a summit in Brussels on Friday.

Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras had pushed for a commitment from member states to refrain from unilateral border closures until an EU summit on the crisis with Turkey being planned for early March.

 

The European Council on Friday said the bloc's response — which also includes NATO assistance against people smugglers in the Aegean Sea — "will only bring results if all its elements are pursued jointly, and if the institutions and the member states act together, and in full coordination".

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