Dear Deeply Readers,

Welcome to the archives of Refugees Deeply. While we paused regular publication of the site on April 1, 2019, we are happy to serve as an ongoing public resource on refugees and migration. We hope you’ll enjoy the reporting and analysis that was produced by our dedicated community of editors and contributors.

We continue to produce events and special projects while we explore where the on-site journalism goes next. If you’d like to reach us with feedback or ideas for collaboration you can do so at [email protected].

Why Greece’s Latest Refugee Emergency Feels Like a Disturbing Deja Vu

As winter approaches, the E.U. called proper shelter and electricity for refugees in Greece an “urgent priority.” Solon Ardittis, director of Eurasylum, asks how such basics are not in place after more than two years of unprecedented resources and policy attention.

Written by Solon Ardittis Published on Read time Approx. 4 minutes
A family sits in their tent at a makeshift camp outside the Moria migrant camp on the island of Lesbos on November 28, 2017. ANTHI PAZIANOU/AFP/Getty Images

In its latest Progress Report on the European Agenda on Migration released on November 15, the European Commission paints a relatively uplifting picture of the evolution of Greece’s handling of the refugee emergency.

It stresses, in particular, the positive effects of the substantial funding provided through the Emergency Support Instrument on the creation of sufficient reception places on the mainland, as well as on the increased capacity on the islands. It also reports on the encouraging outcomes of the deployment of experts from Europol, the European Border and Coast Guard Agency and the European Asylum Support Office (EASO) in terms of increasing capacity for the identification of risk profiles and the fight against smugglers’ networks, as well as on the overall operationalization of Greece’s hotspots. Teams deployed by EASO, in particular, have contributed to increasing Greece’s capacity to identify and register potential applicants for international protection, as well as to conduct nationality assessments and detect possible document fraud.

The report, however, provides only limited coverage of the range of deficiencies and drawbacks that continue to define the refugee emergency in Greece. Not only that, while it accurately points to the increasingly unsatisfactory protection environment for children and other vulnerable groups, and the quality of reception places, the report concludes that addressing such shortcomings should constitute an “urgent priority.” Does this mean, then, that it had not been perceived as a priority for the past couple of years?

Disturbingly, the impression conveyed is increasingly one of deja vu, with the same issues still craving for viable and sustainable solutions more than two years after the outbreak of the so-called refugee crisis.

In particular, it is difficult to apprehend why problem areas such as the adverse effects of winter conditions on the often dire accommodation facilities offered to refugees, the overcrowding of most camps, the situation of children and vulnerable groups, and the considerable delays experienced by family reunification procedures enshrined in the Dublin regulation, to name but a few, should continue to top the Greek and E.U. policy agendas after having absorbed such an unprecedented level of policy attention and financial resources since 2015.

To date, some 1.3 billion euros ($1.55bn) have been spent in support of Greece’s refugee emergency, with the country now ranking as the largest beneficiary of E.U. Home Affairs Funds as well as the exclusive beneficiary of the new E.U. Emergency Support Instrument.

Despite the reach of such dedicated efforts and investments, some of the lingering shortcomings in the management of the refugee emergency to date remain astounding.

To cite but one recent example, does the statement by E.U. commissioner Dimitris Avramopoulos on November 15 calling for all housing units for refugees to be connected to electricity and for further heating appliances to be installed in some housing units mean that the initial terms of reference for the procurement of such facilities had not foreseen such a basic requirement as access to electricity?

Clearly, the persistence of Greece’s refugee emergency cannot be attributed to any financial shortfalls anymore. Rather, it should be understood in the light of more systemic deficiencies relating to both the multiplication of actors involved in the formulation and implementation of relief measures and the increasingly deficient communication, reporting and accountability mechanisms established among them.

As a growing number of firsthand accounts indeed suggest, there continues to be insufficient oversight of the full range of commitments and outcomes of large E.U.-funded investments, particularly in the housing sector, which have in part been subcontracted to a number of nongovernmental organizations. The only measurable evidence in this area is that demand for temporary accommodation facilities continues to outstrip supply, despite the availability of more than adequate funds.

As German MEP Barbara Lochbihler recently emphasized on returning from a mission to Greece, at the end of October, Lesbos was hosting over 5,500 people against a maximum capacity of half that number. In Chios, the ratio was 2,000 to 894, and in Samos, 2,400 to 700. As crucially, some 40 percent of the new arrivals this autumn have consisted of children under the age of six.

Clearly, Greece is not in a position to anticipate, let alone regulate, the number of irregular migrant arrivals since the E.U.-Turkey agreement was adopted in March 2016. Flows have tended to increase in the course of each new disagreement between the Turkish and E.U. authorities, and they will continue to fluctuate on that basis.

However, there is now a pressing need for Greece to streamline its political and administrative management of the refugee emergency, including the handling of its contractual relations with all its implementing partners on the mainland and on the islands.

This further implies that stricter external procedures to monitor and evaluate progress on both program and budget implementation should be put in place. If necessary, the establishment of an independent mediation mechanism to improve communication among all key players, particularly between public authorities in both central and local government and international organisations and NGOs, could also be envisaged.

While it has often been surmised that the logic behind some of the current failings might be guided by Greece’s determination to prevent larger numbers of migrants from viewing the country as a point of entry to the E.U., at this stage few would dispute that it has become critical for fundamental rights principles to take precedence over any other strategic consideration.

Greece should be commended for having assumed E.U. responsibility for the unprecedented levels of migrant inflows since 2015, a situation driven almost exclusively by the country’s geographic position and the largely ineffective intra-E.U. solidarity mechanisms. However, this should not continue to be a license to apply lower scrutiny and accountability standards.

This article was originally published by Global Policy and is reprinted here with permission.

The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Refugees Deeply.

Suggest your story or issue.

Send

Share Your Story.

Have a story idea? Interested in adding your voice to our growing community?

Learn more
× Dismiss
We have updated our Privacy Policy with a few important changes specific to General Data Protection Regulations (GDPR) and our use of cookies. If you continue to use this site, you consent to our use of cookies. Read our full Privacy Policy here.