Al Jazeera News :A tiny trickle of Syrian and Iraqi refugees is being admitted into Macedonia at the Idomeni crossing on the border with Greece, as more than 11,000 remain camped out waiting for their turn.Greek police said Macedonian authorities let in 320 people in between Thursday and Friday morning. A few dozen were being admitted later in the day. The small number was a result of new restrictions imposed on borders last week. Al Jazeera’s Hoda Abdel-Hamid, reporting from Idomeni, said that weather and living conditions at the Idomeni camp had deteriorated – with more refugees arriving each day.She added that the “stranded” refugees in Greece complained that they were not being provided with enough information on how to continue their journey. Most refugees in Greece want to seek asylum in other European nations, such as Germany or Sweden, and need to cross through Macedonia to do so.”There is an overwhelming state of confusion,” our correspondent said. “No clear guidelines have been given as to what the stranded here need to do. Information spreads by word of mouth and often, it’s wrong.”Syrian Saswat Estif, 26, has been at Idomeni for 15 days, waiting patiently to enter Macedonia.The small number of refugee admissions follows a bid raised by Austria and nine Balkan states last Wednesday to stem the flow. The group agreed to grant entry only to those “in proved need of protection” – a move which sharply reduced the intake and effectively excluded refugees from Afghanistan, a country where civilian casualties reached a record 11,000 in 2015.That decision triggered desperate scenes over the past few days in Greece as refugees are faced with tighter controls. Tensions flared on Monday, when Macedonian police fired tear gas and stun grenades at refugees who tried to break through the razor-wire fence between Greece and the Balkan nation.”Unless you declare you are fleeing war, you will not be allowed through,” our correspondent said, commenting on the new restrictions. Despite contributing to the build-up of refugees on the Greek side of the border, Macedonia has complained about the overflow. On Thursday, Macedonia’s foreign minister Nikola Poposki called on Greece to move the thousands of refugees stuck on its side of the border away to more suitable reception centres. Poposki told The Associated Press that this would offer stranded refugees “humane and safe treatment”, instead of having them in tents a few hundred meters from the border.