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With tear gas and razor wire, Macedonia tries to stem refugee tide

I believe that the world can become better, but I also believe that the world can be made worse.
World without Europe (traditional Christian Europe) becomes worse for sure.
 
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Serbia offers brief welcome for migrants rushing to EU
By Carly Learson


Photo: Carly Learson/IRIN
Syrian girls in Belgrade play together while their families organize transport to the Hungarian border

BELGRADE, 21 August 2015 (IRIN) - Across the road from Belgrade’s main train and bus stations is a small park that until recently was known mainly for its sex workers. Now, hundreds of migrants and refugees camp out in the park every day, waiting for buses or taxis to take them north to Serbia’s border with Hungary.

Most began their journeys in Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan and travelled to Greece by boat from Turkey. They were fortunate to make it through Macedonia before the government there declared a state of emergency at its southern and northern borders, deploying riot police to control the thousands of people arriving from Greece every day and trying to board dangerously over-crowded trains to Serbia. On Friday, police reportedly used teargas to control a group of several thousand migrants being kept in a no-man’s land between Greece and Macedonia.

Speaking to IRIN, a spokesperson with the UN’s refugee agency, UNHCR, in Macedonia said the border with Greece had been “de facto” closed as it was being guarded by police and the army, but that 200 to 300 migrants had crossed in the night and reached the train station in Gevgilja.

“We are always concerned if borders are being closed,” she said. “If you control a crowd by deploying the army, you need to make sure people have access to basic assistance and that people are not trapped between borders where there’s no shelter or medical assistance.”

For those already in Belgrade, one final border separates them from Hungary – the start of the EU’s passport-free Schengen zone, access to which would allow them to move with relative ease to other destinations in Europe.

But Hungary’s government has other ideas. It recently passed legislation classifying anyone who enters the country via “safe” third countries, including Serbia, as “economic migrants” who can be returned. Ignoring opposition from Serbia, Hungary is also constructing a fence at the border that is due to be completed at the end of August. Commentators are doubtful the deadline will be met, but migrants are not taking any chances and are moving through Serbia as quickly as possible, pausing only a night or two in Belgrade to rest and connect with smugglers.

UNHCR says 84,500 people have registered their intent to seek asylum in Serbia in 2015, and estimates that a similar number have passed through the country without registering. Just 484 have actually filed asylum applications.

Ahmed* left Syria in late July after his apartment building was destroyed by a bomb that killed many residents. It spared him and his wife as they were not home. Ahmed was also under pressure from the government to complete his military service. In recent years he’d managed to avoid being drafted seven times by paying bribes.

“I can’t go and fight. I don’t want a gun, and I don’t want to shoot anyone. I’m not pro-government. I’m not pro-opposition. If I stayed in Damascus I would be forced to fight sooner or later,” he told IRIN.

After travelling to the Turkish coastal town of Izmir, he waited 15 days for a smuggler’s boat to take him to Greece with a group of others. Halfway across, a Turkish military boat intercepted them, took their motor, and called the coastguard. They sat, stranded between two countries, for 12 hours before being towed back to Turkey. On their second attempt, they reached Greece.

Ahmed’s brother and several other relatives made it to Germany using the same route earlier this year and Ahmed hopes to join them.

He and his friends are spending the night in a parking garage close to Belgrade’s bus station, which became a makeshift camp this week when strong rains forced people camping in the park to find cover. Early in the morning, they will take a bus to Kanjiza, close to the Hungarian border, where they plan to cross and get a taxi to Budapest. Ahmed is less concerned about the partially completed fence than about his money running out before he reaches Germany.

“I’ve got to save money, we all do. I’ve already spent 2,500 euros, so I want to make this as fast as possible.”


Photo: Carly Learson/IRIN
A taxi driver negotiates fares with refugees in Belgrade wanting to go to the Hungarian border

On Wednesday, Serbian Prime Minister Aleksander Vucic announced government plans to build a temporary reception centre in Belgrade with the capacity to accommodate up to 3,000 asylum seekers. He called on the European Union to assist financially, but said even without additional money, Serbia was committed to helping refugees.

“We can’t close our eyes like others in Europe have,” he said.

“Refugees are safe and welcome here. Some will stay, although we know they want to go to more developed countries. If they want to stay, we have no problem – these are good, hard-working people.”

Serbia currently only has the capacity to accommodate 1,000 asylum seekers, plus 80 unaccompanied minors, in temporary housing. But even these limited facilities are only half-full as most migrants hurry to the border.

Migrants with the means to do so stay in Belgrade’s hotels and hostels, but those on a budget camp overnight in the park or carpark, where the atmosphere is upbeat and friendly. NGOs and activist groups distribute hygiene packages, bread, milk, juice and diapers as well as printed maps of the city with information in Arabic. Local police patrol the area around the park but do not attempt to move the migrants out unless there is a serious problem.



Photo: Carly Learson/IRIN
Refugees families sleep in the open at a park in Belgrade

The flow of migrants has brought a new, comparatively wealthy market for goods and services to a country where salaries average 330 euros per month. In Belgrade’s shopping malls refugees browse for clothing, while in the bars around the bus station groups of Syrian men sip soft drinks and check their smart phones. Businesses who attempt to extort or overcharge them are regularly shamed on social media.

Migrants are not only tolerated, but welcomed by the majority of Serbians. This week a columnist offered her resignation from Danas, a national newspaper, after facing a huge backlash for writing that “strange foreigners” were a potential worry. A right-wing politician’s suggestion to build a wall at Serbia’s border with Macedonia was quickly dismissed by both government and opposition spokespeople.


The refugees in Belgrade view Hungary, where the official attitude towards migrants is much less welcoming, as the final hurdle. One man, waving goodbye to his friends as he headed for the bus, demonstrated how he would be keeping his fingers and thumbs in his pockets until he reached Austria, and urged them to do the same. Under the EU’s Dublin Regulation, asylum seekers who are fingerprinted in Hungary can be returned there if they later try to claim asylum in another member state.

The UNHCR office in Belgrade says it is working on a contingency plan should Hungary start implementing the legislation that would allow it to push back asylum seekers arriving from Serbia.

IRIN Global | Serbia offers brief welcome for migrants rushing to EU | Global | Migration | Refugees/IDPs
 
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Meanwhile another 3 million from Syria and Africa are waiting in Turkey to cross the border.
Europe should help Turkey with the refugees crisis instead of trying to close borders that have more holes than a Swiss Cheese, helping building refugee camps and establishing a buffer zone in Syria might be a start.
 
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I don't really know what these people expect. Europe won't accept millions of refugees. And there is literally millions of them in Turkey, Lebanon... Radical right parties in Europe are getting stronger, and many people in EU are not ready to see those people coming to EU countries. And this is only the beginning of the refuge flood. Some countries like Hungary are already taking drastic measures. Bulgaria is ready to send army to the Serbian and Macedonian border if instead trough Hungary, those immigrants decide to go trough Bulgarie. And if they decide to go through Croatia, we can expect the same from them. So far they are only going through Serbia, but if all EU countries close their borders, we will probably be forced to do the same.
 
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I really feel sorry for Macedonia. The guards were doing their best to let families through, until lots of men pushed past.

You think this is bad, take a look at Calais.....It's practically hand to hand fighting every night.
 
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Migrants stoning the police while shouting "Allah Akhbar"




Yes,these poor souls come in peace........ @Gabriel92

Welfare invaders alert.
And when you will see them installed in a western country,theyll shoot death to west jihad against us .... and the other shits.
Wait til the europeans are fed up of migrants.... and those politicians,itll be like 1789 :popcorn:
 
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I for one am Loving it .
You reap what you Sow
 
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I believe that the world can become better, but I also believe that the world can be made worse.
World without Europe (traditional Christian Europe) becomes worse for sure.

Looking at your post I hope it doesn't turn into a modern day crusade.

On topic its a reminder for all people in the world choose good leaders or watch your country falling like rubble.
 
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Welfare invaders alert.
And when you will see them installed in a western country,theyll shoot death to west jihad against us .... and the other shits.
Wait til the europeans are fed up of migrants.... and those politicians,itll be like 1789 :popcorn:


Ofcourse they're welfare migrants.I've read an interview with a Somalian "refugee",he was told that he might end up in Romania or Poland,he was outraged,he was saying he never heard about these countries ,he wants to be in the UK or France.You'd think that if they come from a "war zone" they'd be happy being in a peacefull place with 3 meals a day but nooo.....they want the easy,good life in Western Europe.
 
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beggars can't be choosers. they need to appreciate whatever countries that shelters them. too bad they aren't as useful as any of the Rohingyas. i'd pick them to Indonesia to be trained in Military Service for future conflict with both the ASEAN and Australian Neighbours
 
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Ofcourse they're welfare migrants.I've read an interview with a Somalian "refugee",he was told that he might end up in Romania or Poland,he was outraged,he was saying he never heard about these countries ,he wants to be in the UK or France.You'd think that if they come from a "war zone" they'd be happy being in a peacefull place with 3 meals a day but nooo.....they want the easy,good life in Western Europe.


Let us not tar them all with the same brush.

Some of the migrants are genuine refugees from places like Syria that countries like US, UK and France helped destroy. That is why these 3 countries should be taking these genuine refugees and not countries like Macedonia that had no hand in creating the mess in the first place.
 
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