AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL
MEDIA ADVISORY
15 March 2018
EU: Misery of migration deal with Turkey must end
- Spokespeople recently returned from refugee camps available
- ‘Caged’ activists will participate in a symbolic photo stunt at Schuman Roundabout, Brussels – 11.00 Friday 16 March
Ahead of the second anniversary of the EU-Turkey deal – an agreement reached on 18 March 2016 to return refugees and migrants arriving on Greek islands to Turkey – Amnesty International’s Migration Researcher Irem Arf said:
“The EU-Turkey deal perfectly encapsulates Europe’s current migration policy of ‘out of sight out of mind’. The deal is keeping thousands of people in squalid conditions on Greek islands with the aim of returning them to Turkey. No longer at their doorsteps, the dire situation of these people is conveniently ignored by European leaders celebrating the deal as a success.”
While the deal contributed to a significant drop in the number of arrivals on the Greek islands, in the absence of safe and legal alternatives, thousands of refugees continue to resort to unsafe routes, and smugglers, whose business the EU-Turkey deal aimed to foil, to reach Europe.
Amnesty International is calling for asylum-seekers languishing on the Greek islands to be urgently moved to Greek mainland and for other European member states to fulfil their resettlement and relocation promises.
“Building visible or invisible walls will not stop people trying to restart their lives in safety. European leaders must keep their promises, and bring refugees in from Turkey and frontline EU member states, Greece and Italy,” said Irem Arf.
For more information or to arrange an interview, contact Amnesty International press office on [email protected] +32 2 548 27 73 or +32 483 680 812
A photo stunt will take place at Schuman Roundabout, Brussels at 11.00 on Friday 16 March. Activists will be trapped in a cage, in a symbolic action representing those refugees and migrants trapped on the Greek islands.
Background:
In late February and early March, Amnesty International visited the islands of Lesvos, Chios and Samos where the majority of the refugees coming to Greece land. There are currently around 13.000 men, women and children on the islands, majority in overcrowded camps, many sleeping in unsuitable tents facing risks to their safety and security.