EU refugee policy marks progress, not success

While the European Commission congratulates itself on a job well done six months after the EU-Turkey Deal, infrastructure designed to support the tens of thousands of asylum seekers in Greece is still significantly lacking.

Greece Refugees
Only 578 people have been returned to Turkey via the EU-Turkey Deal since it was signed in March 2016 [Reuters]

More than six months since the EU-Turkey Deal to control refugee flows across the Aegean was signed, the European Commission is congratulating itself on a “steady delivery of results”.

According to its third report on the implementation of the deal released on Wednesday, daily arrivals of refugees and migrants on Greek islands have averaged 81 since June, compared with 2,900 daily arrivals during the same period a year ago.

The progress, according to the Commission, demonstrates that “the business model of smugglers can be broken”.

But the drop in arrivals comes hand-in-hand with significant problems. 

Under the Statement, Turkey agreed to take back all those who don’t qualify for asylum in Europe. So far, though, only 578 people have been returned. This means that the islands of the east Aegean are gradually turning into vast internment camps because the agreement confines newly arriving refugees to Lesbos, Samos, Chios, Leros and Kos.

They are no longer allowed to travel to mainland Greece, from where they might more easily smuggle themselves deeper into Europe.

“When the EU-Turkey deal went into effect, there was no infrastructure that could support the sequestration of people on the islands,” says Chios Mayor Manolis Vournous. 

READ MORE: Refugees in Greece – ‘We are living in a prison here’

“Vial overflowed with new arrivals within four to five days,” he said, referring to a disused aluminium plant the municipality spent 710,000 euros buying and refurbishing as a refugee camp.

The spillover from Vial created two tent cities in Chios, and the refugees, frustrated with waiting, have sometimes turned to petty crime.

Ethnic tensions and the fear of deportation have also led to riots, like the one that sparked a fire around the Moria camp on Lesbos earlier this month.

The government has offered to build a new housing facility on Chios, but people are now increasingly sceptical.

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“Many people now want these people simply to leave. They ask, why are you making more space for these people? Just get rid of them,” said Vournous.

“We are not a danger, believe me, we are in danger here,” said Bushra Asheh, a Syrian woman who has been on Chios for three months and is worried about the anti-immigrant demonstrations that have recently started taking place there.

“I wish to go to another country, another safe country. I need safety,” she says.

In theory, asylum case workers would process people off the islands faster than they would arrive, but Greek asylum authorities never received the level of staff support needed to achieve this from other member states, a problem the report readily admits.

Relocation is the only other way for refugees to get off the islands – a scheme whereby willing European Union member states agreed to relieve Greece and Italy of 160,000 asylum cases.

A year into the scheme, only 5,651 of Greece’s nearly 70,000 asylum seekers have so far been relocated, according to the report.

“The relocation programme has taken time to reach cruising speed,” the report admits, but points out that there is improvement: 1,202 relocations took place in September, the highest monthly figure so far.

Greece is home to nearly 70,000 asylum seekers [Reuters]
Greece is home to nearly 70,000 asylum seekers [Reuters]
Source: Al Jazeera