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Refugee crisis: Pakistani migrants in Greece 'treated like animals'
"I
didn't come here for money, I had money in my country, I was a farmer
with land and animals. But now my brother is dead, I am the only son
left in my family," Gulfam Hassan, 33, is a refugee fleeing political
violence in Pakistan.
As a campaigner for the PTI, the Pakistani
political party led by former cricketer–turned–politician, Imran Khan,
Gulfam became the target of extreme violence – he claims to have been
tortured to the extent that he required plastic surgery.
But
now detained against his will in the Moria refugee detention camp, on
the Greek island of Lesbos, Gulfam finds himself once again involved in
life-or-death political action, as the leader of a hunger strike against
conditions inside the camp.
Pakistanis inside the camp have held daily protests against what they claim is a deliberate attempt to single them out for deportation.
Some 156 Pakistanis have been on hunger strike since last week. Gulfam
claims that Pakistanis are being confined in a high-security detention
facility inside the camp called "Section B" and that they are not are
not being given proper access to claim asylum.
"Greek officials are breaking the laws and don't give us our rights," he told IBTimes UK over the telephone. "Everybody here wants asylum,but the police arrest us and send us to detention. They want to deport us to Turkey.
"Only
Pakistani and Bangladeshi people are being targeted. I think Greek
officials hate us. They are treating Pakistani people like animals."
Gulfam's
brother was killed and he was wounded in a polling station shooting. As
the sole remaining son, his parents convinced him to travel to Europe
to seek safety. He worries about the safety of his family, particularly
that of his father who suffers from a kidney disease. Asylum services overwhelmed
Amnesty
International, which has managed to obtain access to the restricted
site, describes conditions in the camp as "appalling" and warns that
"automatic, group-based detention is by definition arbitrary and
therefore unlawful.
"People detained on Lesbos [...] have
virtually no access to legal aid, limited access to services and support
and hardly any information about their current status or possible fate.
The fear and desperation are palpable."
The latest agreement
between the EU and Turkey, which came into force on 20 March, means that
all refugees arriving on Greek shores will be detained until their
asylum claims are processed. Those whose claims are rejected will be
returned to Turkey. The detentions should apply only to those who
arrived after 20 March.
However, understaffing and continued
arrivals have overwhelmed authorities on Lesbos. As a result, many who
arrived before the date are also being swept up and detained. Shamshaid
Jutt, a 21-year-old computer science student from Sialkot, Pakistan, has
an arrival slip which proves he landed on Lesbos on 28 February –
almost three weeks before the new deal. But due to the backlog he was
not registered until 22 March – two days too late. He has now been
detained inside Moria. "There
are only two officers inside taking interviews," he says, "and they are
taking interviews on Skype and sometimes the internet doesn't work.
There are thousands of refugees and it's a problem because they only
interview 15-20 refugees per day. The process is very slow."
Shamshaid
believes that Pakistanis are being overlooked because of a belief that
Pakistan is a safe country. "I asked why Pakistanis cannot register for
asylum and the reply was that because Pakistan is not involved in an
official war," he says. "Yes, Pakistan is not involved in an official
war, but inside there are many wars in other shapes – shootings,
terrorists, Taliban, mafia, gangs, kidnapping and poverty."
Shamshaid fled Pakistan for those very reasons. His family are the target of criminal groups, known in Pakistan as ishtiari gangs.
His father was shot by members of the gang during a robbery, leaving
him permanently disabled, while his brother, Ajaz Ali, was gunned down
and killed by the gang as he waited at a bus stop.
After the
arrest of the murderers, the gang threatened to kill all the remaining
children in the family if Shamshaid's father refused to pardon the
killers, legally absolving them of the murder.
"They said if you
don't forgive us we'll continue to target your family," he says, "even
your children when they go to school, we will target them and kidnap
them. So, as my parents care about me and I am the only person in my
family who has got an education, they sent me to Europe to be safe."
But
his journey through Iran and Turkey was far from safe. He was kidnapped
and held to ransom while travelling through Iran. His surviving
brother, Arfan Shahbaz, transferred £700 ($989) to the kidnappers to
secure his release, but not before Shamshaid was beaten and left with
scars on his arms and shoulders.
"After I was released I travelled
to Turkey over the mountains by foot. I think I crossed 10 or 12
mountains. The mountains are very high there, it was very dangerous.
Sometimes I crossed ice rivers up to my chest."
"I want to go to
Finland to finish my studies. My family already sold everything we own
so I don't have the money to pay for university, but I was told there
are no tuition fees in Finland."
But before he can reach Finland,
Shamshaid must first get out of Moria. "I'm scared because I don't know
what will happen tomorrow or next week," he says. "I am scared that any
time the police will put me in the detention area and will send me to
Turkey." 'Anxiety and confusion are widespread'
The
EU has come in for heavy criticism from the United Nations High
Commissioner of Refugees (UNHCR) and aid-groups for sending migrants and
refugees back to Turkey, which many have described as being an unsafe
destination where proper access to asylum cannot be guaranteed.
According
to 26-year-old Kaleem Akmal from Sahiwal, Pakistanis fear for their
safety in Turkey. "They are scared about kidnappers in Turkey who pose
as taxi drivers," he says. "They say they will give you a lift, free of
charge, but then kidnap you and beat you. They demand money, they take
your phone and your things."
Kaleem left Pakistan due to poverty
and an inability to find work as an electrician. He spent $4,500
(£3,600) on his journey to Europe and now fears being deported to
Pakistan even poorer than before he left.
According to Boris
Cherishkov, spokesperson for the UNHCR on Lesbos, anxiety in the camp is
leading to desperation amongst the inhabitants. "Anxiety and confusion
are widespread among the population because of overcrowding and food
shortages," he tells IBTimes UK. "We have seen bouts of violence among individuals and sometimes groups.
In
response to the allegations, Lieutenant-General Tsirigoti of the
Hellenic Police denied that anyone in Moria was being denied access to
asylum and stated by email that "registration and identification by the
police is taking place for all those who enter our country illegally,
including economic immigrants [such] as Pakistanis" and that all
refugees inside Moria are "are thoroughly informed of their rights and
obligations in their own native language".
It said Daljinder Kaur gave birth to a baby boy at a fertility clinic in the northern Indian state of Haryana, following two years of in vitro fertilisation (IVF) treatment. The report noted that though Kaur doesn’t possess any official paper to justify her age, but doctors at the hospital have registered her age as 72 years. It noted that if Kaur’s age is correct, that makes her one of the world’s oldest woman to become mother.
I believe that we were all sent here for a reason and that we all have significance in the world. I genuinely feel that we are all blessed with unique gifts. The expression of our gifts contributes to a cause greater than us.
The son of former Nigerian military head of state Yakubu Gowon is due to return to Nigeria after spending 22 years in a US prison after being convicted on drug-related charges. It is believed Musa Gowon was released from the Taft Correctional Facility Bakersfield, California, after US President Barack Obama granted him pardon earlier in November.
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