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Gallery|Humanitarian Crises

The refugees’ passage to Europe

With temperatures dropping, the journey for those caught between borders is becoming even more difficult.

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Refugees Croatia Border/ DO NOT USE/ RESTRICTED
Refugees crossing the border between Serbia and Croatia on foot. They take a path through the cornfields close to the checkpoints to get to the "no man's land" between the two countries. [Ioana Moldovan/Al Jazeera]
By Ioana Moldovan
Published On 27 Sep 201527 Sep 2015

“We want [to] go!” the voices of refugees sound behind the gates of the camp in Opatovac, Croatia, 10km away from the Serbian border.

More than 50,000 people entered the country in little more than a week.

For nights, they had been sleeping in the open – in and around the train station in Tovarnik, waiting for the train to take them to the border of either Hungary or Slovenia.

Temperatures are dropping, making the refugees’ journeys even more difficult, especially for those travelling with children.

The camp in Opatovac, established in one day and with a capacity to hold 4,000 people, is meant as a welcoming step, but refugees see it more like a prison – an obstacle on their way to the desired destinations, with Germany ranking highest as the refugees’ preference.

Croatia is already overwhelmed with the high influx of refugees crossing the border from Serbia.

Over 2,000 refugees are believed to cross every day into the country that has now become the main point of entry into the European Union for refugees.

There is a lot of concern regarding how the country will cope with the increasing number of refugees in the long run, as well as the possibility of a blockage from this point onwards, to Slovenia and Hungary.

The dirt road cutting through the cornfields between the Serbian town of Sid and Tovarnik in Croatia bears evidence of the refugees’ passage.

Old clothes and shoes, food and diapers are scattered on the sides of the path.


 Related: Refugees at Croatia – Serbia border


They arrived in large numbers and now squeeze onto some 800m of roadway, the “no man’s land” between the two checkpoints at the border.

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They wait to be put on the buses and taken to the camp in Opatovac.

Fatigue and frustration grow among the refugees.

So much so, that there were cases where some people decided to end their journeys and request asylum in Croatia.

“We are too tired”, said a group of Syrians justifying their decision.

But the vast majority wants to move on to the countries in which they believe they have a chance to rebuild their life. “We want [to] go!”, they are chanting at the gates of the camp.

Refugees Croatia Border/ DO NOT USE/ RESTRICTED
Around 2,000 refugees are waiting on the piece of land between Serbia and Croatia at the Sid-Tovarnik border crossing. They are organised into groups of 50 for easier access to buses. According to a volunteer, the idea came from a refugee. [Ioana Moldovan/Al Jazeera]
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Refugees Croatia Border/ DO NOT USE/ RESTRICTED
A child playing where refugees are waiting to get onto the buses that will take them to the camp in Opatovac, Croatia, some 10km away from the border. [Ioana Moldovan/Al Jazeera]
Refugees Croatia Border/ DO NOT USE/ RESTRICTED
A Muslim refugee boy lights candles in a graveyard in the area between the checkpoints in the Serbian town of Sid and Tovarnik in Croatia. His father says it is because they respect all religions. [Ioana Moldovan/Al Jazeera]
Refugees Croatia Border/ DO NOT USE/ RESTRICTED
Refugees sleeping among the graves at the border crossing. They have been stuck over night at the border between the Serbian town of Sid and Tovarnik in Croatia. [Ioana Moldovan/Al Jazeera]
Refugees Croatia Border/ DO NOT USE/ RESTRICTED
With temperatures going down, the refugees’ journey becomes even more difficult. [Ioana Moldovan/Al Jazeera]
Refugees Croatia Border/ DO NOT USE/ RESTRICTED
Thousands of refugees are squeezed into some 800m of road between the checkpoints at the border crossing between Serbia and Croatia. [Ioana Moldovan/Al Jazeera]
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Refugees Croatia Border/ DO NOT USE/ RESTRICTED
Refugees are arranged into rows in order to get them on the buses to Opatovac, where a refugee camp was opened on Monday. [Ioana Moldovan/Al Jazeera]
Refugees Croatia Border/ DO NOT USE/ RESTRICTED
Refugees waiting behind the police line to get onto the buses and out of the border crossing. [Ioana Moldovan/Al Jazeera]
Refugees Croatia Border/ DO NOT USE/ RESTRICTED
A refugee family on its way to boarding the bus to Opatovac, the new camp in Croatia with a capacity of 4,000 people. The camp was established in a single day after refugees had spent several nights in the train station in Tovarnik. [Ioana Moldovan/Al Jazeera]
Refugees Croatia Border/ DO NOT USE/ RESTRICTED
Refugees inside the bus that will take them to Opatovac. About 2,000 are still waiting along the short stretch of land between the checkpoints at the Tovarnik border crossing. [Ioana Moldovan/Al Jazeera]
Refugees Croatia Border/ DO NOT USE/ RESTRICTED
A refugee woman with her child waiting in the bus outside of Opatovac camp. UNHCR has been working with Croatian authorities to provide decent conditions for the refugees in the camp. [Ioana Moldovan/Al Jazeera]
Refugees Croatia Border/ DO NOT USE/ RESTRICTED
Refugees being brought into the camp. They are taken in, bus by bus, in order to be registered in an organised manner. [Ioana Moldovan/Al Jazeera]
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A boy looking through the bus window at workers installing reflectors outside the camp in Opatovac. [Ioana Moldovan/Al Jazeera]
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'We want [to] go,' chanted refugees at the camp's gates in Opatovac. [Ioana Moldovan/Al Jazeera]


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