HRW denounces Greece over migrants held on warship

Recently arrived refugees and migrants enter a warship provided for their accommodation at the Port of Mytilene on the Greek island of Lesbos. (AFP)
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Updated 10 March 2020
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HRW denounces Greece over migrants held on warship

  • Over 450 migrants detained on a navy ship docked in Mytilene port in Lesbos
  • In Lesbos, more than 19,000 refugees live in miserable conditions in the Moria camp

ATHENS: Human Rights Watch (HRW) on Tuesday called on Greece to reverse its “draconian policy” toward over 450 migrants detained on a navy ship docked in Mytilene port in Lesbos.
The men, women and children were among those picked up by the Greek Coast Guard since March 1, when Turkey decided to open its borders and let make the crossing.
Since Turkey’s February 28 decision, more than 1,700 people have arrived on the Greek islands in the Aegean off the Turkish coast.
Many of those who reached Lesbos, which is already struggling to cope with the numbers of migrants there, were transferred last Wednesday to the ship.
HRW, quoting a Syrian asylum seeker on board, said many of the 451 detained were women and children and criticized the conditions on board.
On March 1, Greece announced it would not accept asylum requests from the new arrivals the day after Ankara opened its borders, a decision condemned by the UN refugee organization UNHCR.
“Greece’s decision to detain more than 450 people on a naval vessel and refuse to allow them to lodge asylum claims flagrantly violates international and European law,” Human Rights Watch said in a statement.
“The action may amount to an arbitrary deprivation of liberty.”
Bill Frelick, HRW’s director of migrant and refugee rights, added: “Greece should immediately reverse this draconian policy, properly receive these people in safe and decent conditions, and allow them to lodge asylum claims.”




The Greek islands that are witnessing the greatest influx of migrants.

Human Rights Watch said that the Greek authorities had denied them access to the dock area where the detainees were kept during the day — or to the vessel where they spend the night.
The Syrian, who contacted HRW by telephone, said most of the detainees were Afghans, but that 118 are Arabs, including Syrians, Iraqis and Palestinians. Somalis, Congolese, and others from Africa were also on board.
“The children are not receiving sufficient food and clothing,” he told HRW.
“We had only three toilets for 451 people until today, when they brought five portable toilets. There is no shower, no soap.”
Pregnant women were among those detained, but it was not clear if they were getting proper medical care, he added.
He also said he had been denied direct access to a lawyer.
In Lesbos, more than 19,000 refugees live in miserable conditions in the Moria camp, which was built to hold fewer than 3,000 people.
Tension has escalated on the island with the upsurge in arrivals last week.
The Greek government’s decision last month to build new closed camps on the islands, provoked an angry backlash from residents.


Russia sends ‘hundreds’ of missiles, drones at Ukraine

Updated 7 sec ago
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Russia sends ‘hundreds’ of missiles, drones at Ukraine

Russia pounded Ukraine with drones and ballistic missiles overnight on Thursday, ​targeting energy systems and injuring at least seven people in the capital Kyiv, and the cities of Dnipro and Odesa, officials said.
“Hundreds of drones and ballistic missiles targeted energy systems, depriving people of power, heating, and water,” Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha said in a post on X.
Two people were hurt in a “massive” attack on Kyiv, which also hit various buildings, Mayor Vitali ‌Klitschko said.
Klitschko ‌said on Telegram there had been ​hits ‌on ⁠both residential ​and non-residential ⁠buildings on both sides of the Dnipro River bisecting the city.
Fragments had fallen near two residential buildings in one district, but no fire had broken out.
Reuters witnesses heard explosions resound in the city.
Four people, including a baby boy and a four-year-old girl, were hurt in a missile and drone attack on the southeastern ⁠city of Dnipro and surrounding district, regional governor Oleksandr Ganzha ‌said on Telegram.
One person was ‌hurt in a drone attack on ​the southern city of Odesa on ‌the Black Sea, which also damaged an infrastructure facility and ‌an apartment building where a fire broke out at an upper floor, head of the city’s military administration, Serhiy Lysak said.
Lysak also said that a fire engulfed pavilions at one of the city’s markets and damaged ‌a supermarket building.
Regional Governor Oleh Kiper said that energy infrastructure was damaged in Odesa district.
’BLOW TO ⁠PEACE EFFORTS’
“Each ⁠such strike is a blow to peace efforts aimed at ending the war. Russia must be forced to take diplomacy seriously and de-escalate,” Sybiha said.
Ukrainian officials have met Russian officials under US mediation in Abu Dhabi in the latest US push to end the war.
But the talks so far have failed to resolve differences over Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk region, sources say, and Russia has pressed on with attacks often focused on Ukrainian
energy facilities
in the depths of a harsh winter.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said ​on Wednesday the US needed
to put ​more pressure on Russia
if it wanted the war to end by summer.