1st wave of migrants deported from Greece to Turkey - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 07:59 PM | Calgary | -7.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
WorldPhotos

1st wave of migrants deported from Greece to Turkey

The European Union plan to contain the refugee crisis took a major step on Monday with the return to Turkey of 202 people who had not applied for asylum in Greece.

Migrants who haven't applied or qualified for asylum in Greece to be sent back to Turkey

Migrantscamped out onthe Greek island ofChioswatched the arrivalof aTurkish catamaranbefore it was loaded withsome of their fellow migrants on Monday. The ferry held one of the first groupsof deporteessent back to Turkey under a new European Union deal.

(Louisa Gouliamaki/AFP/Getty)

202 deportees landed in Turkey on Monday.

The first wave of deportees consisted of202 people, mostly Pakistanis and Afghans, who had not applied for asylum in Greece. Theylanded back in Turkey under theEU'snewdeal, which isdesigned to halt the influx of undocumented migrants and asylum-seekersflooding Western Europe. This groupbeing deported from Lesboswasguarded byEuropeanFrontexpolice.

(Milos Bicanski/Getty)

The plantargetsmigrants who haven't received asylum.

Under the EU deal, migrants arriving after March 20 are to be held in centres setup on five Aegean islands before being sent back to Turkey if their asylum applications are not accepted.

Over 51,000 refugees hoping to reach northern Europe are stuck in Greeceafter Balkan states sealed their borders.

(Ozan Kose/AFP/Getty)

Deportees arrive at the Aegean port city of Izmir.

A small Turkish ferry carrying deported migrantsarrivedin the Turkish port ofIzmiron Mondaythe designated start date for transfers whichmarks a symbolic benchmark in anagreement thathas been plagued by concerns over human rights and the adequacy of preparations taken in Greece and Turkey.

(Ozan Kose/AFP/Getty)
(Ozan Kose/AFP/Getty)

Aid groups are questioningTurkey's readiness.

German activists lined the shore in Izmir as the first wave of deportees arrived in Turkey. The terms of the EU-Turkey deal haveworried aid groups, as hundreds of migrants continue to land on the Greek islands every day despite the threat of deportation.

(Ozan Kose/AFP/Getty)

Meanwhile,InIzmir,more tents awaited the deportees.

(Ozan Kose/AFP/Getty)
(Ozan Kose/AFP/Getty)

Here's how the deal works:

  • For every Syrian among the returnees to Turkey another one, already cleared and waiting in the country, will be resettled in Europe. Under this voluntary part of the plan, up to 72,000 Syrians are expected to be brought to Europe with the EU footing the bill for transportation.
  • Turkey is to do all it can to ensure the sea and land routes to Greece are safely closed.
  • Though the agreement has been criticized by human rights activists and several political groups in the EU, the UNrefugee agency will monitor the deportations.

Mostly economic migrants being deported.

Melissa Fleming, a spokeswoman for the UN's refugee agency,also saidthat thosedeported on Monday, mostly economic migrants from Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iran and other countries,"did not express their intention to seek asylum."

OnMonday morning, while the first boats from Greece landed in Turkey, 32 Syrians were sent to Germany and 11 to Finland. A further plane load is due in the Netherlands on Tuesday.

In Turkey, Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu urged police officers to show compassion to returnees and not to "distinguish them from our own citizens."

These childrenfencedin at a detention centreon the island of Chiosare among some4,000 migrants and refugees being detained on Greek islands since the agreement came into effect March 20.

(Louisa Gouliamaki/AFP/Getty)

With files from Reuters, The Associated Press and Getty Images