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Greece: The End of The Road For Refugees, Asylum-Seekers and Migrants

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GREECE

THE END OF THE ROAD FOR


REFUGEES, ASYLUM-SEEKERS
AND MIGRANTS


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very year, tens of thousands of
irregular migrants and asylum-seekers
cross the Greek border in search of
shelter, refuge or just a better life within
the European Union. Few of them find it
in Greece.
Refugees, asylum-seekers and migrants
in Greece are highly exposed to a range of
human rights abuses. Greece still does not
have a fair and effective asylum system,
and asylum-seekers face major obstacles
just to register their claims. Those unable
to demonstrate that they have applied for
asylum face arrest and detention or
deportation as it is common practice in
Greece for the police to detain asylum-
seekers and migrants not in possession
Amnesty International December 2012 Index: EUR 25/011/2012
GREECE THE END OF THE ROAD FOR REFUGEES,
ASYLUM-SEEKERS AND MIGRANTS
2
IN SYRIA YOU DIE ONCE, HERE YOU DIE MANY
TIMES WE SLEEP ROUGH AND ARE SCARED
OF RACIST ATTACKS.
A Syrian asylum-seeker in Athens, Greece, speaking to Amnesty International in
October 2012
of valid documents. Those detained are
often held in poor or inhuman conditions
and can languish in detention for
prolonged periods.
The shortage of places in reception
facilities means that many asylum-seekers
and unaccompanied children are left
homeless, or forced to live in squalid
accommodation. On top of that, a new
threat is the dramatic increase in the
number of racist attacks by members
of extreme right-wing groups.


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ARRIVING IN GREECE
The main land route into Greece and
therefore into the European Union (EU)
is across the Evros River from Turkey. In
2012, however, the number of migrants and
asylum-seekers arriving through that route
reduced significantly while summer arrivals
by sea increased significantly.
By November 2012, a 10.5km fence was
constructed along the part of the Greek-
Turkish border where the highest numbers
of entries had been recorded (on account of
the border in that part being on land rather
than running through the River Evros).
Amnesty International believes that the
fence is inconsistent with, and will lead to
the violation of, the right to seek and enjoy
Index: EUR 25/011/2012 Amnesty International December 2012
GREECE THE END OF THE ROAD FOR REFUGEES,
ASYLUM-SEEKERS AND MIGRANTS
3
asylum from persecution, since it will
prevent people who are seeking international
protection from reaching Greece.
Many of those arriving in 2012 by sea,
on islands such as Leros, Lesvos, Symi,
Samos and Farmakonisi, were fleeing
the conflict in Syria; among them many
families with small children. Despite
this, the new arrivals were and continue
to be detained in police stations in
overcrowded, often unhygienic, conditions
or provided with no shelter at all.
Cover: Migrants from Pakistan make their way
along the Egnatia motorway heading south,
near Feres, after crossing the Turkish-Greek
border in Evros Region, northern Greece, 25
December, 2011.
Above left: The remains of a rubber boat used
by migrants to cross the Aegean Sea from
Turkey to the Greek island of Lesvos is washed
to shore, May 2010 in Lesvos, Greece.
Above: A military officer on the site of the
border fence between Greece and Turkey,
aimed at stemming irregular immigration, in
the village of Kastanies, northern Greece,
February 2012.


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Amnesty International December 2012 Index: EUR 25/011/2012
Some people trying to enter Gre ece across the
River Evros told Amnesty International that they
had been pushed back to Turkey by the Greek
authorities.
In June 2012, a boat carrying seven Syrians was
reportedly sunk by a Greek police boat. N., from
Aleppo, Syria, described to Amnesty International
in October 2012 how their boat reached the
middle of the river, where supposedly the Greek
border starts, when the Greek police arrived in a
patrol boat and started pushing their inflatable
dinghy back towards Turkey. Then a police officer
used a knife to stab the plastic fabric of the
boat, which then sank, leaving people to swim to
the Turkish shore.
F., another Syrian man aged 31, said that in
August, a group of 11 people from Syria,
including families with children, crossed the
River Evros and entered Greece. He said that
they walked to a nearby village where, at around
7am the police arrested them and kept them in
the courtyard of a police station along with other
people, around 40 in total. At midnight, the
police bussed them all back to the river and
loaded them into two boats. The police directed
the boats into the middle of the river and he
maintained that two armed policemen pushed
everyone into the river, without life-jackets.
When they made it across the river to the Turkish
shore, he could only count 25 out of the group
of 40 people that the police had brought to
the river.
F. made a second attempt to enter Greece, this
time via the islands. He shared the same boat
from Turkey with C., another asylum-seeker from
Syria aged 21, who explained how he fled Syria
to avoid killing or being killed; Would you kill a
baby? he asked, I saw this happening when I
was a soldier and left when they called me up
again.
C. described how they arrived to the remote
Greek island of Farmakonisi in the following
terms: There were 27 of us on the boat
including three families, with three babies We
were taken to Farmakonisi by Turkish traffickers
who threw us in the sea with nothing but our
life-jackets. said C.
GREECE THE END OF THE ROAD FOR REFUGEES,
ASYLUM-SEEKERS AND MIGRANTS
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F. described the conditions on Farmakonisi,
where there is only a military outpost: There
were 100 of us, we had to sleep on the ground
without beds or even a mattress there were
no toilets. One day they decided to protest
about the poor, inappropriate food and their
living conditions. We went on a hunger strike.
In response, the soldiers began shooting, to
scare and intimidate us. They used their rifles
to shoot three times on the ground and twice in
the air, two metres away from us. The babies
were crying, we were scared, fearing for our
lives, especially as we were coming from a war
zone ourselves.
PUSH BACKS AND UNSAFE CROSSINGS
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Attika Aliens Police Directorate in Athens, who
were hoping to have their asylum applications
registered by the authorities. Men and women
were sitting or lying down in the mud and
rubbish, some of them had been there for
two or more days. These people were queuing
up as part of a weekly ritual the chance to
be one of the 20 or so applicants received by
the Greek authorities each Saturday morning.
Such is the desperation in the queue that
fights can break out as people jostle for a
position. Sometimes they end up in
hospital, said a man from Bangladesh.
An asylum-seeker from the Democratic
Republic of the Congo described how he
had already been waiting for four days and
Index: EUR 25/011/2012 Amnesty International December 2012
NO SAFETY WITHOUT PAPERS
Under international law, including EU law,
Greece has obligations to uphold, respect,
protect and fulfil the human rights of all
migrants, asylum-seekers and refugees who
arrive in the country, however they arrive.
This means that asylum-seekers must, for
example, be able to submit their application
and to have access to a fair and effective
procedure to determine whether or not they
are entitled to international protection.
QUEUING AT PETROU RALLI
In January 2012, Amnesty International
representatives joined the scores of asylum-
seekers queuing in the early hours of a Saturday
morning on Petrou Ralli Avenue, outside the
nights. Day and night here, on the ground,
in the cold and rain, we are waiting patiently
and then they send us away. Why do they
accept only 20 people?
The rest are sent away without papers and risk
detention and deportation. This risk has
increased since August 2012, when police
sweep operations on irregular migrants
intensified. These operations, coupled with the
very limited access to asylum procedures,
mean that anyone without a pink card (a
paper proving a registered asylum claim) risks
being detained and possibly deported without
their asylum claim having been registered, let
alone fully and fairly determined as individuals
detained for immigration purposes also face
numerous obstacles to applying for asylum.
There was no improvement by the time of a
later Amnesty Internationals visit to Petrou
Ralli in October 2012. C. from Syria (see case
page 4) said that he had been trying for five
weeks to lodge an application, and that many
people he knew had just given up trying. He,
along with many others, complained that
now people come up to us, asking for up to
700 to secure a place for you, all under the
nose of the 20 police officers standing by.
GREECE THE END OF THE ROAD FOR REFUGEES,
ASYLUM-SEEKERS AND MIGRANTS
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Far left: A man from Algeria is detained in
Fylakio detention centre, north eastern Greece.
Migrants are often arbitrarily detained for
months.
Left: Detained migrants in the border police
station in Tychero, Evros Region, Greece, 2km
from the Turkish border.


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Amnesty International December 2012 Index: EUR 25/011/2012
He had to fight for his place in the queue
and was injured, but succeeded in submitting
his application the following morning.
WHO SHOULD PROTECT ASYLUM-
SEEKERS AND REFUGEES?
Everyone has the right to seek and to enjoy
in other countries asylum from persecution.
Universal Declaration of Human Rights
The Dublin Regulation, which is part of
EU asylum policy, aims to determine which
member state is responsible for an asylum
application lodged within the EU (and in
some other European countries to which the
Regulation also applies). It usually requires
asylum-seekers be returned to the first
country they entered upon arrival in the EU.
The Regulation is based on the assumption that
all member states have equivalent standards
of protection, which in practice is not the case.
Up until 2011, most EU member states and
other countries participating in the Dublin
system used to return asylum-seekers to
Greece, rather than processing their claims
for international protection. The fact that a
large number of asylum applicants in the EU
and other Dublin system participating states
had entered the EU via Greece meant that
very large numbers of asylum-seekers were
forcibly returned to that country without
having had their applications examined,
which, in turn, exacerbated the already dire
circumstances for asylum-seekers in Greece.
This was the background to the landmark
ruling in the case of M.S.S. v. Belgium and
GREECE THE END OF THE ROAD FOR REFUGEES,
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Greece in January 2011, in which the
European Court of Human Rights
concluded that Greece lacked an effective
asylum determination system. The findings
of the European Court of Human Rights
were confirmed in December 2011 by the
Court of Justice of the European Union in
the judgement of N.S. and Others v. UK.
In light of these rulings, many Dublin
system participating countries have halted
the return of asylum-seekers to Greece.
They should continue to do so.
Despite international condemnation, Greeces
progress towards establishing a fair and
effective asylum system has been limited.
Improvements at the appeal stage of the
asylum determination procedure have been
reported but serious impediments to access
to asylum remain as well as a major backlog
of pending applications. In January 2011, a
new law was adopted that promises a
change to the system. It provides for the
establishment of a new, civilian authority
with no police involvement to receive, examine
and decide on asylum applications at the
initial stage. However, the Asylum Authority, as
it is called, has yet to receive and process a
single application as a result of the significant
staff recruitment problems that it is facing.
Two men from Eritrea who crossed into Greece
irregularly earlier in the morning, by swimming
across the River Evros from Turkey, July 2011.
They are searching for a police station to hand
themselves in and register themselves, after
which they can stay in Greece for 30 days.


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DETENTION FIRST, QUESTIONS
LATER
Sweep operations by the police to round up
people with no papers intensified in 2012.
Those wishing to apply for asylum who do
not manage to do so are at risk of arrest,
detention and if they also do not manage
to apply for asylum while in detention
possible deportation. Detention for
immigration purposes in Greece is used as a
matter of course rather than, as international
human rights standards require, as a last
resort. Under EU law, detention may only be
used after the authorities have demonstrated
that it is both necessary and that less
restrictive measures are insufficient.
In October 2012 a new law on asylum
determination procedures gave police the
Index: EUR 25/011/2012 Amnesty International December 2012
GREECE THE END OF THE ROAD FOR REFUGEES,
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discretion to extend the maximum three or
six-month period that an asylum-seeker can
be held to a further 12 months. The threat
of being held for up to 18 months, in
appalling conditions, may deter asylum-
seekers from applying for international
protection, particularly in view of the
authorities practice of holding people who
apply for asylum while in detention for
prolonged periods.
PRINCIPLE OF
NON-REFOULEMENT
Greece is obliged under international law to
respect the principle of non-refoulement,
according to which no-one should be
removed to any country or territory where he
or she would face a real risk of persecution
or other forms of serious harm. In violation of
this principle, in the past few years, several
asylum-seekers in Greece have been
reportedly deported without their claims
having been registered, let alone fully and
fairly determined.
Asylum-seekers outside Attika Aliens Police
Directorate on Petrou Ralli Avenue, 28 January
2012, queuing for days and nights, with limited
chances of lodging their application.


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CONDITIONS IN DETENTION
The conditions in various immigration
detention centres and police stations where
asylum-seekers and irregular migrants are
held have frequently been criticized by
international organizations. The European
Court of Human Rights has found Greece
to be violating the prohibition of inhuman
or degrading treatment in several cases in
recent years, relating to the conditions of
detention for people held for immigration
purposes.
In July and August 2012, Amnesty
International visited various detention
facilities in Athens, and the Komotini police
academy, which was being used to hold
people for immigration purposes following
the sweep operations against irregular
Amnesty International December 2012 Index: EUR 25/011/2012
Amnesty International interviewed several people
queuing at Petrou Ralli. On 7 July 2012, Amnesty
International representatives talked to K., an
asylum-seeker of African origin who requested to
remain anonymous. K. told Amnesty International
that he arrived in Greece after a long and
perilous journey. I have been trying to apply for
asylum for the past six months he explained. He
said that the other day, somebody threatened
him with a broken bottle to make him abandon
his place: When we ask the police for protection
they tell us fight back.
K. called Amnesty International at the beginning
of August to say that he had been arrested
during a sweep operation in Athens and that he
was being held at the Petrou Ralli detention
facility.
He had not succeeded in registering his asylum
claim as he did not manage to get to the front of
the queue. As a result, he was detained as an
irregular migrant. A few days later he was
transferred to a detention centre somewhere in
northern Greece.
K. kept on trying to apply for asylum while in
detention: the officer says tomorrow every
time I ask him he told Amnesty International
representatives when they saw him at the end of
August and in later telephone conversations.
Finally, in October, two months after his arrest,
K.s asylum application was registered, following
multiple interventions by non-governmental
organizations. However, in December 2012, he
was still being held in detention.
In October, many detainees at the centre went on
hunger strike in protest over their detention
against a backdrop of poor detention conditions
and alleged ill-treatment. A riot broke out in
November reportedly sparked by the tearing of a
Koran by police guards.
GREECE THE END OF THE ROAD FOR REFUGEES,
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THE STORY OF K.


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THE STORY OF H.A.
In late August 2012 Amnesty International visited
the Komotini Police Academy in north-east Greece,
having been told that at least one child was being
held. The Director initially claimed that there were
no children, but eventually acknowledged that
H.A., aged 15, was detained there.
H.A. had arrived in Greece in September 2011
from Afghanistan with his mother and his
younger brothers and sister. His father is seeking
asylum in the Netherlands.
H.A. was arrested during a police sweep operation in
August and separated from his family. When talking to
Amnesty International H.A. was evidently scared and
did not know how long he would have to stay in
detention. He said that the toilets were dirty (though
they had clearly been cleaned shortly before the
delegates visit), there was no warm water and that he
was first allowed to exercise outside just the day before
the organizations visit two weeks after he arrived
at the detention facility. He said that there were three
other children in the same facility, although the Director
insisted that this was not the case. He did, however,
promise to move H.A. to an appropriate facility.
H.A. was moved to the police cells of the Iasmos
detention facility in Rhodopi the same day, a
facility purportedly appropriate for minors. However,
according to the Greek Council of Refugees lawyer
who visited him, H.A. was detained with adults and
sometimes even with people facing criminal charges.
The lawyer said that the police cell in which H.A.
was held was very small, with no outside exercise
space and with little natural light. On 7 October
2012, H.A. was transferred to a reception facility
for minors in Konitsa (north-west Greece).
Index: EUR 25/011/2012 Amnesty International December 2012
migrants conducted in August. In the
Elliniko detention facilities, conditions
amounted to inhuman and degrading
treatment. In both the New and Old Elliniko
detention facilities, bedding was old and
dirty, toilets were filthy and detainees had
access to poor quality drinking water.
Those held at Old Elliniko had no access
to outside exercise and no natural light
reached their cells.
DETENTION OF UNACCOMPANIED
CHILDREN
Unaccompanied or separated children in
Greece continue to be routinely held in
detention, and for prolonged periods, until a
place in a reception centre is available. The
Amygdaleza immigration detention centre
for unaccompanied male children was
holding children in substandard conditions
for up to three months in August 2012
because of the insufficient number of
places in reception centres. Amnesty
International visited centres in Athens and
Evros where children were being detained
with adults and/or were registered as adults.
GREECE THE END OF THE ROAD FOR REFUGEES,
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Asylum-seekers and migrants held in the
Fylakio Detention Centre, Evros Region,
northern Greece, October 2010.
on incidents of racially motivated violence
between January and September 2012. The
Network found that more than half of the 87
recorded incidents were connected with
extremist groups that acted in an organized
and planned manner. In certain cases, the
victims or witnesses reported that they
recognized individuals associated with the
far-right political party, Golden Dawn among
the perpetrators.
On 7 September 2012, in Rafina, Golden
Dawn supporters were joined by one of their
members of parliament (MPs) and attacked
market stalls belonging to migrants with
sticks and batons. A few hours later, a
similar incident took place in another city,
Messolongi, again with the participation of
an MP for Golden Dawn. In October 2012,
Amnesty International December 2012 Index: EUR 25/011/2012
RACIST ATTACKS
Since 2010, asylum-seekers, refugees and
irregular migrants, as well as the unofficial
mosques, shops and community centres
they have developed, have been targeted in
racially-motivated attacks. There was a
dramatic rise in the number of attacks
throughout 2012. The economic crisis and
severe austerity measures have heightened
xenophobic feelings in some sectors of
society and played into the hands of extreme
right-wing groups. Golden Dawn, a far-right
political party with an aggressive anti-migrant
rhetoric gained 18 seats in the Greek
parliament in the June 2012 elections.
Victims are usually unwilling to report the
attacks to the authorities, particularly those
whose irregular migration situation renders
them vulnerable to arrest and detention
themselves. This contributes to the general
climate of impunity for the perpetrators of
such attacks.
In November 2012, the Minister of Public
Order and Citizens Protection presented a
draft presidential decree providing for the
establishment of specialized police units at
the Athens and Thessaloniki police
directorates to tackle racially motivated
crime. However, the draft decree does not
include a provision that would protect victims
who are in an irregular situation from arrest
and deportation during the investigation and
possible prosecution of alleged perpetrators.
In October 2012, the Racist Violence
Recording Network published their findings
GREECE THE END OF THE ROAD FOR REFUGEES,
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the attack they were throwing rocks and
breaking the shop windows.
The police came to investigate the incident and
after a brief questioning they arrested both Z.A.
and S.I. because they had no documents. In
October, they were both in detention, pending
deportation. There were no reports of arrests of
those responsible for the attacks.
Index: EUR 25/011/2012 Amnesty International December 2012
the Greek parliament lifted the immunity
from prosecution of the two Golden Dawn
MPs who participated in the events. In
November 2012, a prosecutor brought
charges for, among other things, unlawful
violence, damage to property and violations
of the law on racial discrimination, against
K. Barbarousis, one of the Golden Dawn
MPs, in relation to the incident at the
market of Messolongi.
On 10 September 2012, at around 8.30pm two
men dressed in black entered a barbershop run
by a Pakistani man. At first they verbally
attacked the Greek customer who was present,
asking him why he was having a haircut in a
shop owned by Pakistanis, said S.I. who was
present in the shop, he reacted and the two
guys stabbed him. Z.A., who worked in the
shop, said, then they started destroying the
shop and throwing Molotov cocktails one
came so close to my head that part of my hair is
burned. However, this was not the only incident.
We have often seen the people who attacked us
that day said S.I., they are boys, around 18 to
20 years old, who pass by nearly every week and
threaten to shut down the shop. A week before
GREECE THE END OF THE ROAD FOR REFUGEES,
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NEIGHBOURHOOD ATTACKS
Above left: A racist attack on a migrant in the
centre of Athens, Greece, 12 May 2011. The
group wear Greek flags and carry a variety of
improvised weapons.
Above: A racist attack on a migrant in the
centre of Athens, Greece, 12 May 2011. One
of the attackers carries a knife.
Below: The blood stained clothes of a victim of
a racist attack, Greece, August 2012.


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RECOMMENDATIONS
To the Greek authorities:
n Implement the reforms of the Greek
asylum system, and ensure unimpeded
access to asylum determination
procedures particularly in the Attika Aliens
Police Directorate in Athens;
n Prohibit the detention of
unaccompanied migrant and asylum-
seeking children in law and end it in
practice.
n Combat the increase in racial
discrimination and related violence,
including by publicly condemning all such
intolerance, and by prosecuting and
punishing the perpetrators of such acts.
To European Union member states and other
participating countries in the Dublin system.
n Abide by the rulings of the European
Court of Human Rights and the Court
of Justice of the European Union by
maintaining the halt of transfers of asylum
seekers back to Greece and take
responsibility for those asylum seekers.
n Share responsibility for asylum
seekers more equally, taking into account
actual protection standards and asylum
seekers' needs.
CONCLUSION
Due to its position, Greece remains one of
the main entry points for refugees, asylum-
seekers and migrants seeking to enter the
EU. The burden on Greece is great and,
given the current economic crisis,
increasingly difficult for it to deal with alone.
Greece clearly needs support from the EU
to carry this burden. However, this cannot
excuse the impediments that deny people
their rights, the xenophobic rhetoric, or the
racist attacks. It is time that Greece and the
EU act to put an end to the violations of the
rights of asylum-seekers and migrants.
Amnesty International is a global movement of more than 3 million
supporters, members and activists in more than 150 countries and
territories who campaign to end grave abuses of human rights.
Our vision is for every person to enjoy all the rights enshrined in the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights and other international human
rights standards.
We are independent of any government, political ideology, economic interest
or religion and are funded mainly by our membership and public donations.
Index: EUR 25/011/2012
English
December 2012
Amnesty International
International Secretariat
Peter Benenson House
1 Easton Street
London WC1X 0DW
United Kingdom
amnesty.org
GREECE THE END OF THE ROAD FOR MIGRANTS AND
ASYLUM-SEEKERS
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Above: People march through the streets of
Athens, Greece, to protest against racism and
in favour of immigrants' rights, December
2011.


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