Locals on Greek islands set up blockades to stop building of new migrant centres

BLOCKADES

BLOCKADES

Locals on three Greek islands hosting thousands of migrants on Monday begun setting up blockades aimed at stopping the government from building new migrant detention centers.

The protest groups on Lesvos, Chios, and Samos have received broad support on the islands, including from municipal authorities and farming associations.

The government says it is determined to build detention centers on recently appropriated land to replace overcrowded camps on the islands,  announcing that construction would resume this week after a brief break for consultations.

But many islanders fear that new facilities will only increase the number of migrants and refugees after the government failed to deliver on a pledge to ease overcrowding over the winter months.

“We are guarding the (appropriated) area, and if they start building, everyone here and from the surrounding villages will join the protest — because we don't want this,” Stephanos Apostolou, a protest organizer and municipal council member from the village of Mandamados on Lesvos, told The Associated Press.

Greece remains the European Union's busiest entry point for refugees and migrants, with nearly 4,000 making the winter crossing from Turkey to Greek islands this year through Feb. 16, according to data from the United Nations refugee agency.

“We have to make a distinction between the refugees and illegal immigration," he told the AP, speaking on the sidelines of a meeting of southeast European foreign ministers in the northern Greek city of Thessaloniki.

"That's very important and we have to fight the smugglers, the criminals who organize illegal immigration and we should protect the European Union from illegal immigration.”

*Source: AP 

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