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Berlin to take up to 100 children from Greek refugee camps

Tens of thousands want to enter Greece from Turkey.

Madeline Chambers (Reuters)
Berlin, Germany
Tue, March 10, 2020

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Berlin to take up to 100 children from Greek refugee camps A migrant father with his child awaits on the Greek side of the border to enter Macedonia near the southern Macedonian town of Gevgelija, on March 1, 2016. Berlin will take in 80 to 100 children from Greek refugee camps. (ANTARA FOTO/Visar Kryeziu)

B

erlin will take in 80 to 100 children from Greek refugee camps, an official in the German capital said on Tuesday, as concern mounts about migrants amassing on the Turkish-Greek border.

European politicians are struggling to agree what to do about the tens of thousands of migrants who have been trying to enter Greece, a member of the European Union, since Ankara said last month it would no longer keep them on Turkish soil.

Germany's coalition parties said on Monday they were ready to take in several hundred children from Greek refugee camps together with other EU countries, with the focus on children who are sick or younger than 14 and unaccompanied.

Asked when children might arrive in Berlin, the capital's senator for interior affairs, Andreas Geisel told broadcaster RTL: "It now depends on how quickly the German government implements this decision. I think it's more like today than tomorrow."

Greece has a large number of people waiting in refugee camps and hoping enter the EU, many of them fleeing war, persecution and poverty in the Middle East and Africa.

It is refusing to open its borders to the refugees now trying to enter from Turkey, which hosts about 3.6 million refugees from Syria.

Greece and the EU accuse Turkey of deliberately goading the migrants to cross the border as a way of pressuring Brussels into offering more money to host the refugees or supporting Ankara's geopolitical aims in the Syrian conflict.

 

UNICEF concerned

More than 3,000 children in Greece need to be found homes, the U.N. Children's Fund (UNICEF) said.

While welcoming a move by Finland to take in 150 unaccompanied children, Afshan Khan, UNICEF Director, Special Coordinator, Refugee and Migrant response in Europe, said far more was needed.

"We need Europe to stand alongside both Greece and Turkey and the other frontline Mediterranean states to be able to help shelter and house many of the unaccompanied children," she told Reuters on Monday after a visit to the Turkey-Greece border.

France, Portugal, Finland and Luxembourg have also offered to take in some children.

Khan described large numbers of women and children near the border who dream of crossing into Europe, but camp in cold and wet open fields in tents or under plastic sheeting.

The EU wants to avoid a repeat of 2015 when more than a million people, mostly from the Middle East, reached its shores via Turkey and Greece.

Chancellor Angela Merkel's open-door migrant policy, under which Germany took in nearly 1 million people in 2015 alone, led to a surge in support for the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD).

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