Institute of Race Relations | 09.02.2017
As refugees and migrants die in Greece’s ‘hotspots’, military camps and in transit, the EU, the UNHCR and Greek institutions must be held to account.
When the European Commission announced, in September 2015, a plan to create hotspots to fingerprint, screen and register refugees arriving in Greece and Italy, many of the larger humanitarian agencies welcomed the development, hopeful that at last some official framework for reception had been agreed. Eighteen months later, and a year after the EU-Turkey deal turned reception into detention, the situation on the Greek islands and in northern Greece remains dire for those refugees who have not been moved out of flimsy tents into prefabricated heated containers or formal housing. In the face of the Arctic blast and unusually strong snowfalls, hotspots have become death traps and refugees are fighting for survival.
These hotspots are not only places of great misery, but they are zones where truth and transparency are in very short supply. The IRR has been trying to ascertain the circumstances in which thirteen refugees and migrants died since April 2016 in Greece, with six of these deaths occurring in hotspots. In only one of these cases are we in a position to provide the full name of the deceased; the only available identifier is nationality. At least six of the dead were refugees from Syria, including Syrian Kurds, three were from Afghanistan. Five of the dead were living at the hotspot at Moria, on the Greek island of Lesbos where over 3,000 refugees are accommodated, well above stated capacity. Those who died here did so because the heaters and gas canisters they had obtained in order to keep warm or cook food were faulty, or used in dangerous situations.
An Iraqi man died of a cardiac arrest at a hotspot in Samos (refugee population around 1,800 in a place designed for less than half that number). Since the Idomeni makeshift migrant camp close to the Macedonian border was cleared by police in May 2016, sub-standard government refugee camps lacking basic amenities have been set up, with three of the dead living in such facilities around Thessaloniki. The oldest to die was a grandmother of 66, the youngest a two-month-old baby. There are three children amongst the dead. The remaining two deaths we have recorded were of men who died of hypothermia after having crossed from Turkey via the river Evros. It’s likely that they made the perilous crossing in order to avoid being detained in the hotspots on the Greek islands. Autopsy results are shrouded in secrecy. Nevertheless, the facts speak for themselves. Overcrowded, unprotected and dangerous conditions are all symptoms of institutional neglect. The simple truth is that the securitisation of asylum policy has come at the expense of refugee protection, as well as basic human rights.
Here is the list of the deceased:
- 21 April 2016: A Syrian Kurdish refugee dies in hospital in Thessaloniki several days after being hit by a police van in disputed circumstances in the makeshift Idomeni camp.
- 28 July 2016: Azaz Ragda, a Syrian woman in her twenties, dies on her way to hospital, having fainted while taking a shower at the Softex camp in the industrial zone of Thessaloniki, where temperatures inside tents and showers are reported as over 40C. The ambulance, it is claimed, took ninety minutes to arrive and the ill woman, who had been given a sedative by a doctor from the Red Cross, suffered an epileptic seizure on her way to hospital. A demonstration and a hunger strike followed her death.
- 16 October 2016: A 35-year-old Syrian Kurdish woman and her 10-year-old son living at the Oreokastro migrant camp near Thessaloniki, which accommodates approximately 1,300 people, die and another sibling is seriously injured after being struck by a car just outside the camp. A riot erupts, with angry camp residents alleging that an ambulance did not arrive and when the police were asked to take the victims to hospital in a patrol car, they refused.
- 24 November 2016: A 66-year-old Afghan grandmother and her six year-old grandson die at the Moria camp in Lesbos after a gas cylinder cooker explodes. The explosion leaves others seriously injured, destroys vital documents and is followed by major disturbances at the camp.
- First week of January 2017: The body of an Afghan man, believed to be around 20, is found in the town of Didimoteicho, close to the border with Turkey. The cause of death is registered as hypothermia.
- 14/15 January: The frozen body of a man, whose age and nationality are not known, is discovered in a village in northern Greece.
- 24 January: A 22-year-old Egyptian dies in the Moria camp, Lesbos. Media reports suggest that he inhaled toxic fumes from a heater. The authorities refuse to confirm or deny the reports.
- 25 January: A 41-year-old Iraqi man suffers a cardiac arrest at a hotspot in Samos. He had been living there with his wife and three children since December but had gone for a month without medication for hypertension and diabetes.
- 27 January: Noursan, a two-month-old Syrian-Kurdish baby, dies in a taxi en route to hospital from the Ritsona camp, north of Athens. Noursan was diagnosed with congenital cystic fibrosis and needed oxygen support that did not exist in the camp. His parents’ requests to be moved closer to the hospital had gone unanswered. An ambulance had been called, but did not turn up. The parents are initially accused of child neglect.
- 28 January: A 46-year-old Syrian man dies in the Moria refugee camp in Lesbos. Media reports claim that the autopsy result suggests he died of ‘pathological reasons’. But other reports suggest that he inhaled toxic fumes from heaters.
- 30 January: A Pakistani man, probably in his 20s, dies in the Moria camp in Lesbos. Despite an autopsy, no information is forthcoming on his death. Local media reports that an Afghan man who shared the same tent was hospitalised with carbon monoxide poisoning. Volunteers at Moria report other casualties.
The circle of blame
The deaths that have occurred over the winter have at least been reported in the media, partly because human rights defenders, wary of the positive communication strategy of the UNHCR and the EU, issued a number of press releases. Even so, officialdom does not appear over- anxious to investigate. What is particularly worrying is the secrecy shrouding autopsy results, which, if left unchallenged, will ensure that completely avoidable deaths such as these become the new normal. Philippa Kempson, of the Eftalou/ Molovos refugee support group on Lesbos, told IRR News of her fear that the ‘deaths could be subject to cover ups’, and her particular concern that ‘the “accidental” deaths in Moria still do not have a conclusive cause of death’. She also drew attention to the escalation in suicide attempts, particularly amongst unaccompanied minors, at Moria. ‘No one accepts responsibility for what is going on, just a circle of blame,’ she said.
In fact, evading accountability is hard-wired into the way refugee reception is organised in Greece, as there is no central authority responsible for the camps’ administration but a number of actors – a mixture of EU officials, the Greek army and other Greek institutions, the Red Cross and the UNHCR. This means that when anything goes wrong, the various actors end up blaming each other – something academics refer to as a process of distanciation, in which complex chains of responsibility make it difficult to connect cause (ie, government policies) with effect (ie, border-related deaths). Guardian journalist Patrick Kingsley made a similar point in his recent exposé of how a multi-million pound fund administered by the EU’s aid department ECHO, implemented in Greece by UNHCR and aimed at creating adequate facilities to protect refugees from the winter, has been mishandled. Kingsley points out that as ‘no single actor has overall control of all funding and management decisions in the camps, this has allowed most parties to distance themselves from blame’.
Taking action
It is human rights organisations, civilian volunteers like the Kempsons, doctors’ associations, legal advocates and the Last Rights project, that are not only keeping these deaths in the public eye, but are stepping in to do the work that the EU, UNHCR and Greek officials should be doing – ie, the work of refugee protection! After the first explosion at Moria on 24 November, that claimed two lives, volunteers from Advocates Abroad provided information sessions in English, Arabic and Farsi, issuing videos on safe use of gas and how to distinguish good and bad canisters and bottles.
Refugees in the camp are also drawing attention to their plight, using whatever means they can – from open letters and public statements, to protest marches and hunger strikes. But as the cases above clearly demonstrate, in the absence of care and protection, which is after all the UNHCR’s mandate under the Refugee Convention, hotspots are places of violence and death – and they can only erupt!
UNHCR was invited to comment but no response was received by the time we went to press.