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Coastguard seen apparently trying to capsize boat full of refugees before attacking them with stick, as child drowns off coast

Turkey says more than 117,000 migrants have crossed into Europe – but Greece says no more than 1,000 have made it across

Borzou Daragahi
International Correspondent
Monday 02 March 2020 16:10 GMT
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Turkey releases footage of Greek coastguard hitting migrant boat with sticks

Video emerged on Monday of Greek coastguard officers apparently trying to capsize a boat full of refugees at sea, as a crisis mounted over migrants from the Middle East attempting to reach western Europe.

A migrant child was also killed on Monday when the boat they were aboard capsized off the island of Lesbos and a Syrian refugee trying to cross the Greek border was reportedly killed by rubber bullets, underscoring the dangers faced by those attempting make the passage west from Turkey. It is unclear if the child was on the boat seen in the video.

The deaths, alleged abuse at sea and a diplomatic standoff over migrants between Turkey and the European Union follow an attack by forces loyal to the Damascus regime of Bashar al-Assad on Thursday that killed at least 33 Turkish soldiers in northwest Syria in a confrontation at one of a dozen bases controlled by Ankara.

In response to the incident, Turkey allowed thousands of migrants penned up in the country to head towards its EU land and sea borders with Greece and Bulgaria. The move is seen by analysts as both an attempt to put pressure on western powers to help it resolve the Syria crisis, and to distract the Turkish public from the loss of soldiers in a foreign land.

Turkey says it has allowed more than 117,000 migrants to cross into Europe, but Greeks say no more than 1,000 have made it across. Neither figure has been independently verified, and each country has a political interest in fudging the numbers. On Sunday, Greece suspended temporary protection for asylum seekers, citing national security reasons, drawing criticism from campaigners.

"I get that they have some security issues and concerns," said Devon Cone, senior advocate at Refugees International. "But they also have international obligations towards people seeking safety who approach their borders."

The Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan warned on Monday that millions of migrants would soon head to the European border. “Since the moment we opened our borders, the number heading to Europe has reached hundreds of thousands,” he said during an event in Ankara. “This number will be stated in the millions soon.”

The Greek coastguard claimed in a statement that the boat carrying the lost child was overturned off the coast of Lesbos by its occupants in an attempt to draw rescuers, who managed to save all but the child.

A video released by Turkish authorities purportedly showed Greek coastguard officers attacking a boat full of migrants – nearly ramming their vessel, firing warning shots at them, and striking them with a sharp object.

“Greek coastguard officials performed manoeuvres aimed at sinking the rubber boat en route to Greece carrying irregular migrants off the Bodrum district of Mugla province,” a Turkish official said in a note to journalists. “They opened fire afterwards. Later on, irregular migrants in the rubber boat were hit by long sticks used for manoeuvres.”

The migrants were later rescued by the Turkish coastguard, said the official, and it was not clear if the video showed the incident described by the Greeks.

A 22-year-old Syrian man from Aleppo was also reportedly killed Monday after he was allegedly shot with a rubber bullet while trying to cross the Greek frontier by foot, according to Jenan Moussa, a correspondent from pan-Arabic Dubai-based al-Aan news channel.

A Greek government spokesman called reports of a slain refugee at the border “fake news”.

The opening of the Turkish border is seen as an attempt to put pressure on the European Union, which has downgraded Syria to below Libya and Iran on its list of Middle East and North Africa priorities.

Turkish officials accuse the west of abandoning the country to fend for itself as it is flooded with millions of refugees from Syria and faces the prospect of hundreds of thousands more because of the ongoing Russian and Syrian offensive to retake Idlib province from rebels.

Turkey was supposed to curb the flow of migrants and refugees to Europe as part of a €6.6bn (£5.4bn) aid package, but only half the money has been dispersed, owing to EU accounting rules. But the Turks say the allocated funds are not nearly enough to cover the costs of at least 3.6 million Syrians sheltering in the country.

In a speech on Monday, Mr Erdogan demanded that Europe do their fair share for migrants, who are leaving Syria, Iran, and Afghanistan for Europe. “The era of unilateral sacrifice is over,” he said.

In a series of tweets, Mr Erdogan's communications director pressed Turkey's demands on the EU. "Europe must act on principle in the most serious challenge of our age, the migration crisis," wrote Fahrettin Altun. "It will not be resolved by denying entry to thousands of refugees seeking protection. It starts with working with Turkey on comprehensive solutions and a European-wide mobilisation."

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