Istanbul riot police block new migrant march to Greek border


(MENAFN- The Peninsula)A child cries in front of a police barricade after migrants were blocked by Turkish riot police while walking towards Edirne in Istanbul yesterday.

Istanbul: A new march by a group of mainly Syrian migrants trying to reach Europe overland from Turkey was blocked by police outside Istanbul yesterday.

Around 700 men women and children from a group that had been blocked for the past week at Istanbul’s main bus station set out yesterday evening on footfor the northwestern city of Edirne 250km away.

After spending the night camped on the hard shoulder of the motorway some of the migrants managed to board buses or private vehicles.

But a few hundred others continued to walk along the emergency lane in the midst of snarling traffic before being brought to a halt by a cordon of riot police about 50km from Istanbul.

After hours of negotiations they eventually agreed to be taken back to Istanbul by bus. The secretary-general of Turkey’s main opposition Republican People’s Party who attempted to mediate in the standoff accused the government of failing the refugees.

“No-one in Turkey is helping this people no-one is offering them shelter access to education or healthcare” Gursel Tekin told reporters at the scene. “They’re trying to enter Europe out of despair. The government unfortunately is responsible for this situation” he accused.

Five people were arrested Dogan news agency reported. Edirne which lies around 10km from the Greek border and 20km from Bulgaria has become a new rallying point for migrants trying to reach Europe.

Encouraged by a social media campaign demanding migrants be allowed to travel overland to the EU rather than risk their lives at sea around 2000 refugees many of whom have been living in Turkey for months flocked to the city last week.

Hundreds more who attempted to follow in their path found themselves stuck in Istanbul after bus operators acting on orders from the authorities refused to sell them tickets for the journey.

Edirne’s governor has warned that any migrants trying to smuggle illegally into Europe through his province will be returned to refugee camps in southern Turkey. Turkey has taken in more than two million Syrians since 2011 of whom around 260000 live in refugee camps. The rest try to eke out a living in communities across the country. AFP


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