Pakistanis brawl with other migrants over access to Greek ‘floating refugee camp’

About 50 migrants from Pakistan, Afghanistan and Iran threw stones and exchanged blows as tempers boiled over

Pakistani, Iranian and Afghani migrants scuffle outside the police station of the city of Kos over priority at a registration queue on the Greek island of Kos, August 15, 2015. PHOTO: REUTERS

KOS:
Pakistani migrants desperate to get off the Greek island of Kos fought with each other on Saturday while nearby a passenger ship chartered to house and process refugees lay empty 24 hours after it had arrived.

Outside the island's main police station, about 50 migrants from Pakistan, Afghanistan and Iran threw stones and exchanged blows as tempers boiled over in the intense mid-summer heat.

Pakistanis have little chance of getting aboard the ship, the Eleftherios Venizelos, as priority is being given to Syrians. Greek authorities had said on Friday that the ship would primarily cater to Syrians, who are being treated as refugees fleeing a civil war in their country. Pakistanis, on the other hand, are being considered as ‘migrants’.

The Syrian ‘refugees’ have been deemed to have greater rights under international law than the Pakistani ‘economic migrants’. The ultimate destination for most of these economic migrants is northern Europe with the hope of finding more support and jobs.

A few hundred Asian migrants had gathered at a local police station hoping to register and obtain papers which would allow them to stay temporarily in Greece, when the brawl began.

But the station was closed on Saturday, owing to a religious festival in Greece. But some migrants thought that those from other countries may get preferential treatment. They started rival chants of "Afghanistan!", "Pakistan!" and "Iran!", with fists and stones following soon after.

At least one man was kicked on the ground, while others wandered around with blood on their faces.

Other members of the crowd moved in to cool tempers and calm returned after several minutes of disorder.

Riot police, drafted in earlier this week from the mainland to reinforce local officers on the normally tranquil holiday island, watched from the sidelines. "We didn't intervene because our priority is to protect the police station," one riot policeman told Reuters.

Later, a group of Iranians tried to break the police line blocking access to the police station. But the riot police beat back the crowd with batons during the brief affray.

On Tuesday, local police used fire extinguishers and batons against migrants after violence broke out in a sports stadium where hundreds of people, including young children, were waiting for immigration papers.

About 40 riot police were subsequently sent to the island to keep order.

Syrians wait to board ‘floating refugee camp’


A few hundred metres from the Kos police station, the white-painted ANEK Lines vessel remained at a quayside with only its crew aboard a day after it had docked while Greek officials debated among themselves how the Syrians should be let aboard.

Nearly a quarter of a million migrants have crossed the narrow stretch of water from Turkey in small boats and dinghies to Europe this year, according to the International Organisation for Migration.

Of these, about half have come to the Greek islands, with numbers surging in the summer when calmer weather makes the crossing marginally less risky.

Early on Saturday, about 300 Syrians had gathered on the quayside in the hope of getting aboard the ship - a car ferry belonging to ANEK Lines which operates routes to the Greek islands and across the Adriatic to Italy - where about 2,500 people are due to be housed and processed.

The Greek government chartered the vessel to ease conditions on Kos, where several thousand migrants are staying in hotels if they can afford it, or more often sleeping in tents or the open.

However, as hopes of a swift embarkation faded, the Syrians retreated from the quayside to find shade in the midday heat.

Officials from the local administration, police and Greek coast guard were discussing what to do.

"It's a team operation to find the safest solution and to gather the migrants safely. There are a large number of people," a coast guard official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

The official did not know when embarkation would start.

Migrants keep turning up on Kos

Meanwhile, migrants kept arriving from the Turkish mainland, which lies within sight of Kos. The coast guard said it had rescued 212 people on the island's northeastern coast who were in four inflatable dinghies and one speedboat. As they had no valid travel documents, they were arrested for entering the country illegally and taken for questioning.

Just after dawn on Saturday, Reuters witnesses saw three dinghies each carrying around 30 to 50 people, mainly families from Syria and Iraq as well as young men, coming ashore.

Later, six men, a woman and a baby from Iran arrived, some crying and nearly fainting, after a 3-1/2 hour journey from Turkey.

In the distance was another boat with about 10 men paddling with one oar and their hands.
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