Current:Home > InvestCharity says migrant testimonies point to a recurring practice of illegal deportations from Greece -EliteFunds
Charity says migrant testimonies point to a recurring practice of illegal deportations from Greece
View
Date:2025-04-16 16:26:25
ATHENS, Greece (AP) — A leading international medical charity says it has received 50 testimonies over the past two years from migrants that point to a “recurring practice” of alleged secret, illegal and often brutal deportations back to Turkey from two eastern Greek islands.
Doctors Without Borders, or MSF, said in a report released Thursday that the forced returns were said to have been carried out by uniformed Greek officers or unknown masked individuals.
The report follows charges by charities, activists and Turkish authorities, who alleged similar actions in the Aegean Sea and at the northeastern land border with Turkey.
Athens has strongly denied such so-called “pushbacks,” and argues that its coast guard has saved hundreds of thousands of migrants from the Middle East and Africa crossing in small boats from Turkey.
Greece says it needs to protect its borders, which are also those of the European Union, from mass illegal immigration. In March 2020, Turkey opened its borders into the EU and actively encouraged migrants to cross into Greece.
MSF said Thursday that in one case, migrants reported to its staff that two people — including a pregnant woman — allegedly died off Samos when their boat was towed at high speed toward Turkish waters.
“As a medical and humanitarian organization, we could not stay silent in the face of the exceptional scale and severity of the violence reported to our teams” on Lesbos and Samos, MSF said. It added that “non-assistance (to migrants), violence and pushbacks have become part and parcel of a system of border management” on the two islands.
Lesbos and Samos, both key landing points for migrants arriving from Turkey, are the only Greek islands where MSF is active.
As a result, MSF warned, migrants are turning to alternative, longer voyages that pose a greater risk of hardship or death. There has been an increase in recent years of yachts crammed with migrants leaving Turkey and rounding southern Greece to head for Italy.
MSF said its report drew from accounts by migrants between Aug. 2021 and July 2023. It didn’t cite any first-hand observation of pushbacks by its own teams, but said they had met indications of violence against newly arrived migrants.
It added that the discrepancy between the more than 10,000 arrivals reported to MSF over the two-year period and the nearly 8,000 people actually found “indicate(s) that people unaccounted for by MSF … may have been forcibly returned to Turkey.”
The group said it held anonymous interviews with 56 people who claimed to have suffered illegal deportations. A total of 183 pushbacks were reported, with nine people claiming to have fallen victim to the practice between eight and 14 times.
The report said that while some allegations concerned boats being stopped at sea and towed back to Turkish waters, others said that people who had reached Lesbos and Samos were rounded up before they could claim asylum, mistreated and then dumped offshore on inflatable life rafts.
“From land, testimonies point to a pattern of practices including physical assault, handcuffing, informal detention, groups being forcibly taken to the shore before being pushed back at sea, as well as humiliating strip searches,” it said. The perpetrators were described as “groups of unidentified people with covered faces” who often stole migrants’ phones, money and other possessions.
“MSF has witnessed people running out of the forest screaming, crying and reporting being beaten, and MSF medical staff have treated people on the spot for suspected violence-related injuries,” it said.
In two cases, it said its workers found people who said they had been handcuffed with zip ties by masked men who ran away when they heard the MSF teams approaching.
MSF said that “despite extensive and credible evidence,” Greece and authorities “have failed to hold to account the perpetrators of these violations.”
In June, the EU border agency asked Athens to provide “clarifications and information” on two reported pushback allegations.
___
Follow AP’s global migration coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/migration
veryGood! (439)
Related
- SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
- Pregnant Kourtney Kardashian Shares Glimpse Into Beachside Getaway With Travis Barker
- After the East Palestine train derailment, are railroads any safer?
- Saguaro cacti, fruit trees and other plants are also stressed by Phoenix’s extended extreme heat
- Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
- Deep-red Arizona county rejects proposal to hand-count ballots in 2024 elections
- Big Brother Fans Will Feel Like the HOH With These Shopping Guide Picks
- Stock market today: Asia mixed after the US government’s credit rating was cut
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy leaving Italy vacation early after death of lieutenant governor
Ranking
- Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
- Lindsay Lohan shares post-baby body selfie: 'I'm not a regular mom, I'm a postpartum mom'
- NASA detects faint 'heartbeat' signal of Voyager 2 after losing contact with probe
- Fitch just downgraded the U.S. credit rating — how much does it matter?
- A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
- A father rescued his 3 children from a New Jersey river before drowning
- Texas Medicaid drops 82% of its enrollees since April
- Woman escapes kidnapper's cell in Oregon; FBI searching for more victims in other states
Recommendation
See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
Drug agents fatally shoot 19-year-old man in Georgia. They say he pulled out a gun
Orlando Magic make $50K donation to PAC supporting Ron DeSantis presidential campaign
Assault trial for actor Jonathan Majors postponed until September
Could your smelly farts help science?
Man accused of holding woman captive in makeshift cinder block cell
Family pleads for help in search for missing Georgia mother of 4
Swaths of the US are living through a brutal summer. It’s a climate wake-up call for many