The alternative to the inhumane should not be the unknown, says MSF

 

The Hamada family, Kurdish from Damascus, Syria, inside the Idomeni refugee camp, in Greece, on the border with Macedonia. Photo:Rorandelli Rocco

Athens - As the eviction of the camp of Idomeni continues, the medical humanitarian organisation Doctors Without Borders (MSF) denounces the forced movement of thousands of refugees, the lack of information provided about their destinations and the restrictions imposed on humanitarian assistance during this process.
 
MSF calls on the Greek authorities to assure that adequate and continuous assistance is guaranteed during the process of movement of people from the informal camps and in the new locations.
 
“People are not being informed of where they are going and this is far from acceptable. They need to be able to make informed decisions and must be provided with accurate information in order to do so” stated Michele Telaro, MSF’s Project Coordinator in Idomeni. “They have already fled conflicts, violence and spent more than two months in unacceptable conditions in Idomeni. The alternative to the inhumane should not be the unknown and the uncertain”.
 

MSF’s teams have seen many anxious patients who had been asked to leave without clear information on their destination: “Our nurse reported that the majority of people she saw in the clinic burst into tears when she spoke to them. They asked her where they would be going, whether there would be doctors there.  She didn’t know what to say, because we don’t know if an adequate continuity of care will be assured,” continued Telaro.

 A MSF mobile clinic in the BOP gas station refugee camp near Evzoni, Greece. The camp has about 500 people scattered in abandoned buildings and tents in a nearby forest. Photo: Rorandelli Rocco


MSF’s medics consulted patients with chronic diseases such as diabetes and epilepsy who need continuous treatment. These patients are worried about the risk of interruption to their care and uncertain about what medical facilities will be available when they move. The teams also had difficulty referring patients to hospital, as those who leave the camp do not have permission to return and a referral could have them separated from their families.
 
Moreover, as the eviction process started, on the 24th of May, MSF and other NGOs had restricted access to the camp area, with a reduced number of staff allowed to enter, while volunteers were completely expelled from the camp. In these conditions, the basic services like sanitation and distribution of food could not be properly assured.

A MSF team vaccinate children at Idomeni camp in Northern Greece. Photo:Rocco Rorandelli

“Let’s be clear, this cannot be considered a voluntary relocation as these people had no other choice; did not have adequate information and assistance in the camp was drastically cut”, declared Loïc Jaeger, MSF’s Head of Mission in Greece. “It is unacceptable to force this move on the resigned and desperate people of Idomeni. We would like to tell them they will be able to re-join their families in Europe that they will have access to adequate protection, but we can’t. We can’t even reassure them about the conditions that they will find in the new camps”.
 
“Moving refugees from informal camps to formal camps is not the solution. In Europe, in 2016, refugees should not be living in tents, they should have their claims for asylum heard and be provided with homes so that they can restart their lives in safety,” concluded Jaeger.


Since the beginning of its intervention in Idomeni in April 2015, MSF has done more than 38,000 medical consultations and deployed up to 260 staff. MSF has also distributing relief items, providing shelter and water and sanitation.
 

Find out more about MSF in Greece