'We were told to push migrants back to sea': Greek minister - BBC Newsnight
Rescuing refugees from drowning will be ‘criminalized’ under new EU law – activists
RT,
4
February, 2016
A petition has been launched calling on EU leaders to scrap plans that
would criminalize those who rescue migrants and refugees arriving on
the Greek islands as part of a push to secure the border between
Turkey and Greece.
London-based
civil liberties watchdog Statewatch has released the confidential
European Commissionreport detailing
the plan, which was outlined in talks between EU ministers in
Amsterdam late last month.
The
proposed plans would remove the exemption for charities, volunteer
groups and others who provide“humanitarian
assistance” to
refugees from being considered “smugglers.” Under
the new rules, which are aimed at reducing human smuggling and
trafficking, these groups and individuals would be criminalized.
The
EU would instead create a state-run agency that would force would-be
volunteers to register with the police and work under tightly
controlled EU relief plans.
EU: Criminalisation of helping refugees and in Greece: NGOs and volunteers have to "register" with the police:
http://www.statewatch.org/news/2016/jan/eu-med-crisis-criminalising-civil-society.htm …
The
petition, which has amassed almost 5,000 signatures to date, was
launched by an activist in London and calls on the European
Commission to scrap the plans.
Statewatch
director Tony Bunyan says the plan “fails
to acknowledge the crucial role played by Greek islanders and
volunteers in rescuing and caring for migrants who cross the
Mediterranean in unsafe vessels.
“The
EU should amend its anti-smuggling laws as soon as possible to
confirm that no one giving such vital humanitarian assistance should
ever be penalized for it.”
The EU plans to criminalise #refugee rescue operations at sea. Thousands more will die. Please sign and share: https://www.facebook.com/lifejacket.protest/posts/426422570881964 …
In
January alone, at least 244 refugees drowned trying to cross the
Aegean Sea. This figure is three times higher than the 82 who died
last January and 20 times higher than the 12 who died in 2014.
According
to the International Organization for Migration (IOM), nearly 37,000
migrants have arrived in Italy and Greece by sea since the beginning
of last year.
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