EU deal with Turkey fails to stem refugee flow to Greece

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EU deal with Turkey fails to stem refugee flow to Greece
A Syrian refugee arrives on the shore near the city of Mytilene on the Greek island of Lesbos.

Lesbos (Greece) - Twelve boats had arrived on the shoreline near the airport by 6am, a police official said.

By Reuters

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Published: Mon 21 Mar 2016, 3:29 PM

 They waved, cheered and smiled, elated to have made it to Europe at dawn on Sunday in a packed blue rubber motor boat.
The 50 or so refugees and migrants were among the first to arrive on the Greek island of Lesbos on day one after an EU deal with Turkey designed to close the route by which a million people crossed the Aegean Sea to Greece in 2015.
Exhausted but relieved, the new arrivals wrapped their wet feet in thermal blankets as volunteers handed out dry clothes and supplies.
Witnesses saw three boats arrive within an hour in darkness in the early hours of Sunday. Two men were pulled out unconscious from one of the boats amid the screams of fellow passengers and were later pronounced dead.
Twelve boats had arrived on the shoreline near the airport by 6am, a police official said.
Under the European Union deal with Turkey, all migrants and refugees, including Syrians, who cross to Greece illegally by sea from Sunday will be sent back to Turkey once they are registered and their asylum claims have been processed. In return, the EU will take in thousands of Syrian refugees directly from Turkey and reward it with more money, early visa-free travel and progress in its EU membership negotiations. Among the arrivals on the seaweed strewn beach on the south of Lesbos was Syrian Hussein Ali Mohammed, whose studies were interrupted after the war began.
He said he wanted to go to Denmark to continue university. Asked if he was aware of the European decision, he said:
"I know that. I hope to cross these borders. I hope I complete my studies here (in Europe), just this. I don't want money, I just want to complete my studies. This is my message."
Hussein Ali, who worked odd jobs in Turkey to pay a smuggler to bring him across, said he did not want to go back.
"I worked very, very hard in Turkey, I collected the money to come here ... It's very dangerous and not good.


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