Thousands of migrants were forced to flee to safety on Monday when their camp on the Greek island of Lesbos was badly damaged in a fire apparently set on purpose, police said.
No casualties were reported, but tents at the Moria camp were “almost entirely destroyed” and containers that provide additional accommodation and health and registration services were damaged, a police source in Athens told reporters.
Firefighters were prevented from tackling the fire early on by clashes that broke out among rival nationalities in the camp, reports said.
Photo: EPA
“Between 3,000 and 4,000 migrants fled the camp of Moria” to the surrounding fields, with strong winds fanning the flames also hampering firefighters, the police source said.
Once inside the firefighters brought the fire under control.
Police were sent out after the migrants and were in the process of returning them to the camp, the officer said.
The officer said there was “no doubt” that the fire had been set on purpose by those inside.
About 150 minors housed at the camp were evacuated to a children’s village on the island, the officer said.
Earlier on Monday, tensions rose in Moria owing to a rumor that migrants were about to be deported en masse to Turkey, state agency ANA reported.
A strong police presence at the camp had initially calmed tempers, the officer said.
Another two fires broke out in the olive groves near Moria, but were brought under control before the third blaze erupted at the camp.
There are now more than 60,000 refugees and migrants in Greece, most of them seeking to travel to Germany and other affluent EU countries.
They are unable to do so after several eastern European and Balkan states shut their borders earlier this year.
The situation is particularly acute on Lesbos and other eastern Aegean islands facing Turkey, where most of the migrants land and are held for registration.
Island residents have also staged protests to demand that the migrants be moved to the mainland.
The procedure is part of an EU-Turkey deal designed to limit the flow of refugees and migrants to Greece’s shores.
According to Greek government data, there are more than 13,000 people on five islands in facilities built to house fewer than 8,000.
Most of them are Syrian refugees fleeing civil war, in addition to Iraqis, Afghans, Pakistanis and others from the Indian subcontinent and north Africa considered to be economic migrants, and as such not automatically entitled to asylum in Europe.
On Lesbos itself there are in excess of 5,600 people, more than 2,000 more than the nominal capacity of the camps.
Brawls are common, with many trying to avoid being returned to Turkey or their home countries after spending a small fortune and risking their lives trying to escape poverty and persecution.
The fire came as UN member states promised to try to improve the plight of millions of refugees around the world.
Speaking at the first UN refugee summit in New York, Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras said that failure to confront the refugee crisis would unleash xenophobia.
“If we fail to support this, the political repercussions will be felt not only in Greece, but everywhere,” he said. “We will give space to nationalistic, xenophobic forces to show their face for the first time since the Second World War.”
More than 850,000 migrants arrived on the Greek islands last year, many after risking their lives in unseaworthy boats and dinghies.
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