We know someone who’s working with an independent
organization in Turkey and she reports around 2000 people hiding in the “jungle”
near the coast of Turkey. There is literally nothing there in terms of
infrastructure. People are sleeping rough on the floor, no toilets, no food and
no shelter. They have to evade the Turkish coastguards and now more than ever so
reliant on smugglers to keep them “safe”. One of the Greek municipality workers
told me that the smuggling network in Turkey had to date earned billions of
euros in profit, much of which is linked to low level corruption of coastguards
etc and high level corruption of government officials. Smuggling people to Europe
is big business but so is the EU money flooding into Turkey. Turkey needs to
simultaneously sustain its smuggling networks whilst showing it is suppressing
them to continue to benefit from 2 revenue streams. I’ve never felt more
disillusioned in our global political process.
Yesterday was a national holiday in Greece
so we were asked by the Greek MdM team to cover their shift in Vial. Vial which
used to be the registration centre is now detention centre. Any refugees that
arrive “irregularly” are detained here and we have no idea what their fate will
be. They are allowed to apply for asylum and family reunification but we have
been told that currently Vial can only process 3 asylum claims per day. This poster
was put up overnight in the camp and explains that refugees who are awaiting
asylum claims will not be allowed to leave Vial.
Lots of volunteers, and other NGO workers I’d
spoken to had said Vial was really awful and before I went to Vial, I was quite
nervous about how it would feel to be working inside a militarised detention
centre. I think because I’d worked in a heavily militarized context in
Slovenia, the camp here in Greece seemed relatively ok to me. Yes, there are
many issues and also it’s a completely unsustainably situation but compared to
Slovenia I still felt there was some respect for the people detained there. The
police and army officials here are still Greek which means they are relaxed
about everything. I haven’t seen any guns, and there is a very limited security
presence actually inside the camp. In Slovenia, as I explained before you
couldn’t move without bumping into a gigantic heavily armed solider wearing a
balaclava. At the moment things seem calm but who know what will happen as
people become more agitated.
Entrance of Vial |
Line for food distributions (you can only see half of the line and this was half way through the distribution) I think it takes over an hour to queue for the food |
One of the issues I saw yesterday was overmedication
with patients able to see many different doctors and clinics over and over
again. Seeing the doctor is an activity and gives the refugees something to do to
counter the boredom and frustration of being locked up for no reason. Many just
come to vent and tell their story again. We heard many people repeating their
list of health complaints and asking how it was ok for them to be locked up. We
also heard many complaints against the organisers of the camp, many people feel
they have no route for information. Who do they get clothes, blankets and
nappies from? I couldn’t answer these questions and when I tried to find out I
felt as lost as the refugees.
Another big problem is the tension between
the Syrians and the Afghanis. On Thursday there was a big fight between two
groups involving women and children as well. One Syrian came to the clinic to
get a wound on his head redressed. He said that they had “made up” but
throughout the day we heard everyone complaining about everyone else. The
Afghans push in front of the line for food, the Syrians have all the shelters
with beds… These people have only been detained for 1 week at the moment and
tensions will continue to mount as their situation because more desperate. The
WAHA team which works night shifts have had to leave the camp on several
occasions because of security concerns when the refugees tried to protest
against being detained.
Working in this context as a doctor is so
challenging. I really struggled to discuss people’s cases without being able to
offer any solace of when things would be resolved. I had one family come to see
me because the father was losing sight in his right eye. He had glaucoma and
had already lost sight in the left and over the past 5 months it was
progressing rapidly. He was concerned he would leave his 5 children with a
blind father. As we talked both him and his wife broke down in tears and begged
us to help them leave the centre. It was truly heart-breaking and I have
organised for him to see an ophthalmologist next week but he’ll be taken by
police escort and marched around like a prisoner. It’s hard not to feel
complicit in the system when you’re providing care in this setting.
I also really struggled with another
patient. An 8-year-old boy who was brought by his older brother. They had fled
the Taliban and had been travelling to Europe in search of answers about the boy’s
condition. He was very weak and often fell over and couldn’t stand from
sitting. It only took me a few minutes examining him and listening to the story
before I realised the boy most likely had muscular dystrophy and my heart fell
into my stomach. I thought for a long time how to tell them and explain what
could happen and realised there was no solution for them. Anywhere else they’d
be urgently referred to a paediatrician for muscle biopsies and genetic tests
then put in touch with support networks and physiotherapy, but here all I could
do is explain what I thought the diagnosis was. It was the hardest consultation
I’ve done in Greece and when both of them started crying I could hardly hold
back the tears. I’ve informed UNHCR and all the officials I could find of their
situation but no one could give me any concrete steps to take to help them.
Still nice moments in the clinic, continuing to provide a humanitarian space |
Currently, in Souda there’s one family who arrived before the deal who had made it to Athens and registered for relocation but the rest of their family arrived the night after the deal went live. This half have been placed in Vial. The family travelled back to Chios to try and be reunited with them and are now waiting indefinitely to hear news or be able to see their family in Vial.
Wembley
stadium has a capacity of 90,000
people. Every weekend 90,000 people go and come back to see football
matches
and watch concerts. Its not that many people in the grand scheme of
things and London’s
infrastructure absorbs it easily. Just over half this number of people
are stuck
in Greece, in makeshifts camps, in squalid conditions, in detention
centers and
a handful in hospitals and hotels. This is not some unmanageable
problem. This
is not some scary flood of people banging at the door of England to come
claim
£75/week in benefits. This is just half a stadium of people that has
been forgotten
and completely abandoned in their most vulnerable and needy time. This
could be managed in a humane and sensible way if the political will was
there. Shame on
Europe.