3 BD nat’ls among 202 migrants being shipped from Greece to Turkey

block
UNB, Dikili :
A controversial European Union plan to curb migration and smash smuggling rings in Turkey began on Monday
as 202 migrants, including three Bangladesh nationals, from two Greek islands were piled onto boats and shipped back to Turkey.
Greek authorities said a total of 191 men and 11 women were sent back. Those included 130 people from Pakistan, 42 from Afghanistan, 10 from Iran, five from Congo, four from Sri Lanka, three from Bangladesh, three from India, one each from Iraq, Somalia and Ivory Coast, and two Syrians who had asked to be sent back.
Under heavy security, authorities on the Greek islands of Lesbos and Chios deported people from 11 nations – the first in a plan that has drawn strong criticism from human rights advocates but is seen by some European nations as the only way to resolve the continent’s migration crisis.
The first vessel from Lesbos was escorted into the Turkish port of Dikili by the Turkish coast guard as a helicopter hovered overhead. The migrants were taken to red-and-white tents for registration and health checks.
About a dozen people stood at the port holding a banner that reads: “Welcome refugees. Turkey is your home.” That sentiment came in sharp contrast to protests over the weekend by locals who feared that Dikili would turn into a warehouse for refugees. A second vessel motored in from Lesbos and a third from the nearby island of Chios later Monday. Those who arrived from Lesbos were sent to “reception and removal center” in the northwestern Kirklareli province on the Black Sea, according to Turkey’s state-run Anadolu Agency. It said the Syrians would be placed in refugee camps and other migrants would be deported.
In an address to police officers in Ankara, Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu urged them to show “compassion'” to the returning migrants and said Syrian refugees from camps in Turkey would be sent to Europe. In the other half of the plan, 16 Syrian refugees from Turkey flew into the central German city of Hannover on Monday to be resettled and 16 more were expected on a flight later in the day.
Turkey and the European Union reached a deal last month that says migrants who reach Greece illegally from Turkey after March 20 will be returned to Turkey unless they qualify for asylum. For every Syrian turned back, a Syrian refugee is to be resettled from Turkey to the EU. The agreement aims to deter people from making the short but dangerous journey with smugglers to Greek islands from the Turkish coast.
More than 52,000 migrants and refugees are stranded in Greece following the border closures of European nations further north, but only those who arrived after March 20 – about 4,000 so far – are being detained for deportation. Monday was a symbolic benchmark in the agreement that has been plagued by concerns over human rights and the adequacy of preparations made in Greece and Turkey.
block