Refugees
from ‘Endless’ War
Policymakers in Official Washington talk piously
about waging “humanitarian” wars, but the real-life
consequences of these interventions play out in
squalid refugee camps far from U.S. shores, as Ann
Wright witnessed.
By Ann Wright
May 16, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Consortium
News"
- “If you don’t like refugees coming to your
country, stop voting for politicians who love to
bomb the shit out of them.” Our delegation from
CODEPINK: Women for Peace saw this written on a tent
at the Idomeni refugee camp in on the
Greek-Macedonian border.
As we well
know, neither the Greek nor Macedonian governments
have bombed people, but they are having to deal with
the huge numbers of refugees caused by the decisions
of government far away. However, in a U.S.
presidential election year, it is a message that
American voters should heed.
The Obama
administration, which inherited the chaos from the
2003 Iraq war from the Bush administration but which
has been bombing ISIS in urban areas in Iraq and
Syria,
has resettled only 1,736 Syrian refugees
over the last seven months — despite President
Obama’s pledge to resettle at least 10,000 Syrians
by September 2016.
In
contrast, Canada has resettled more than 26,000
Syrian refugees since late 2015, while Turkey,
Lebanon and Jordan have together taken in millions
of Syrian refugees since the conflict began five
years ago.
In early
May, we had flown from Athens to Thessaloniki,
Greece’s second largest city, and then had driven
one hour north to the Greek border with Macedonia.
The name of the tiny hamlet of Idomeni has become
synonymous with the largest refugee camp in Greece.
As we
arrived, a tremendous thunder, lightning and
hailstorm hit the area ripping down tents, making
mud pools and deluging tents and the clothing and
bedding inside. We saw the worst conditions (except
cold and snow) that the 13,000 refugees must endure
in five camps within four miles of the Macedonian
border.
All five
are “informal, unofficial” camps and refugees can
come and go at will. They have refused any attempt
to put them into the formal “detention” camps that
place them in isolated areas and restrict their
movement within Greece.
As a
result, the services provided are not particularly
well organized although all have limited
porta-potties, showers and faucets for washing
clothes. All have basic food provided primarily by
volunteers, non-governmental organizations and the
Greek military (in only one camp).
The first
camp one comes upon on Highway 75 heading north from
Thessaloniki is at the gasoline station and rest
stop called EKO. Over 2,000 persons are camping in
the large parking lot, grocery store and car wash.
Save the
Children provides rice porridge and oranges daily
for children under 11 years of age and estimates
there are over 1,000 children. We helped hand out
the porridge by going tent by tent and asking how
many children of that age group were in the
household (tenthold).
Save the
Children coordinators told us that they liked having
the daily contact with people in their living space
rather than having people stand in another long
line. We were greeted with a warm smile and a
thank-you by every mother to whom we delivered the
porridge.
International Efforts
The Boat
Refugee Foundation of the Netherlands has a number
of volunteers that help with the porridge delivery,
young women and men from the Netherlands, Ireland,
Sweden and the UK.
At EKO
camp, we met a distinguished man who told us he was
a mathematics teacher in a small village outside of
Damascus, Syria. He and his 13-year-old daughter
made the trip from Syria, through Turkey, by boat to
Samos, ferry boat to Piraeus, train from Athens to
Thessaloniki and taxi to EKO camp. He had been at
the camp for one month and three weeks. He left his
wife and 17-year-old daughter behind in Syria
Leaving EKO
camp, we stopped at the Park Hotel on the outskirts
of the village of Polikastro where the volunteer
headquarters is located. Each night at 8 p.m.,
experienced volunteers provide an orientation for
new volunteers and update everyone with the day’s
happenings.
In the back
of the Park Hotel is the kitchen of Hot Food Idomeni,
a group of volunteers that cook basic meals of
staples such as rice, beans and curry in large vats
for 5,000 persons each day. Paul of the United
Kingdom heads up the volunteer force of 45 persons.
Two shifts
of 15 people prepare the meals and two groups of
another 15 load up the food, drive the food to the
camps and distribute it. Paul said that they are
spending about $2,000 per day for food and
transporting the food for 5,000.
The Greek
military feeds one of the other camps and has called
on Hot Food Idomeni to help them when their food ran
out. Hot Food Idomeni is a remarkable place to work
as a volunteer and it’s a great organization to send
donations as their work is definitely
keeping people alive.
After the
Park Hotel, we stopped at the 500 person camp called
Lidl, named for a nearby merchandise store. Most
persons live in white tents provided by the Greek
military. The tents are in long military precision
lines next to a small runway. The military does not
let new volunteers into the camp, only those
affiliated with organizations.
Next we
visited the Hara camp, named for a gasoline rest
stop and nearby hotel. Five hundred persons are
camped around the gasoline station area. Norway’s
Northern Lights Aid group is nominally “in charge”
of the camp and provided tents, coordinates clothes
distribution and has a sundry item purchase for
refugees.
Charlie and
Henry formed
Northern Lights after they worked for months
on Lesvos and when volunteers were displaced by the
detention center staff, they came to the Macedonian
border to help with refugees there. Hara, a much
smaller camp, has a much different atmosphere
because of the attention given by Northern Lights
volunteers, including four from Poland and the Czech
Republic when we were there. They had much to do
with a more positive environment.
A
Sprawling Camp
Idomeni is
a sprawling camp within 500 meters of the Macedonian
border and has around 10,000 persons. One Doctors
without Borders (MSF) staff told us that no one
knows the exact number as refugees are coming and
leaving at will.
The camp
has been open as a stop for refugees who were able
to cross into Macedonia prior to March 22 and go
into Europe. Now those in the camp are stuck. They
must remain in the camp until a decision is made on
their individual cases. Some have been in the camp
for nine weeks.
Greek
police have two large buses that block the railroad
tracks between the camp and the border. Many of the
refugees have placed their tents on the railway
line. Others have their tents in the fields which
became mud pits with the heavy rain that we
witnessed on the day we arrived. Parents were
cleaning out the tents of mud and rain that had
poured in, hanging up clothes, blankets, and
sleeping bags on the fences along the railroad
track.
Not
everyone is sleeping in small tents. Two large UNHCR
temporary tent buildings have approximately 100
bunks in them arranged much like the overcrowded
prisons in the U.S. People make privacy areas from
the blankets hanging down from the upper bunks.
Four dinner
lines began forming in the late afternoon. The four
feeding locations had hundreds of people lined up
for simple meals of beans and rice, and a couscous
type meal.
As with any
refugee camp, industrious sellers have begun. Some
had small amounts of coffee, powdered milk,
crackers, eggs for sale. Those who had purchased
food were cooking it over wood fires from trees they
were chopping down, not an enduring move to local
residents in the area.
Millions of
refugees await their fate and future in Greece,
Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan as the international
community slowly decides how to handle the flood of
people fleeing chaos in their countries caused by
military operations. Millions of others hope that
their arrival in Europe will provide them an
opportunity for a life without conflict until they
can return home.
Ann Wright
served 29 years in the US Army/Army Reserves and
retired as a Colonel. She served as a US diplomat
for 16 years in US Embassies in Nicaragua, Grenada,
Somalia, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Sierra Leone,
Micronesia, Afghanistan and Mongolia. She resigned
from the US government in March 2003 in opposition
to President Bush’s war on Iraq. She is the
co-author of “Dissent: Voices of Conscience.” |