Macedonia
declares state of emergency over surge in migrants & refugees,
ready to deploy army
RT,
20
August, 2015
Macedonia
has declared a state of emergency on its southern and northern
borders over a surge in migrants and refugees, the Interior Ministry
announced. The country said it would involve the army in confronting
the crisis.
"We
expect the involvement of the army will bring two desired effects –
it will increase security among our citizens in the two regions and
will allow for a more comprehensive approach toward people expressing
their interest in applying for asylum," Interior
Ministry spokesman Ivo Kotevski said.
He
told Reuters that the “official
border crossings are not shut,” but
that authorities may have moved to seal off illegal routes used by
the migrants and refugees.
Just in: Macedonia declares 'state of emergency' over migrants influx pic.twitter.com/lj1xltePHb
— mcmounes (@mcmounes) August 20, 2015
Thousands
of migrants were stranded on Thursday in a 'no-man's land' between
Macedonia and Greece, near the Macedonian town of Gevgelija. From
there, they planned to catch trains that would take them to the
Serbian border, and onto Hungary, where they would benefit from
Europe's borderless Schengen zone.
Riot
police were sent to the town to try to restore order amid the
chaos, and Reuters has reported that the flow of migrants in the town
now appears to have suddenly stopped.
Macedonia
has become a major transit route for migrants heading from Greece to
more prosperous EU countries
On
Wednesday, Macedonia warned that it is running out of trains to
transport the thousands of Syrian refugees heading toward the
European Union, and called on its neighbors to help combat
the “alarming
situation.”
"The
Macedonian Railway Company has no more capacity to carry all those
who want to travel toward western European countries," the
head of the state railway, Nikola Kostov, told Telma TV channel,
urging neighboring countries and others to provide more train
carriages.
The
problem may worsen with the potential arrival of thousands who are
being evacuated by boat from the Greek island of Kos to the mainland,
after 21,000 people landed on Greek shores last week alone.
"Depending
on how Greece uses ships to decongest the islands that will also
temporarily increase the arrivals here," said
Alexandra Krause, senior protection officer at the United Nations
Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) in the Macedonian capital Skopje.
Almost
39,000 migrants, most of whom hail from Syria, have been registered
passing through Macedonia over the past month. This figure is more
than double that from the previous month.
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