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World / Americas

Slovenia buckles as migrants rush to escape winter, border closures

Published: 20 Oct 2015 - 05:09 pm | Last Updated: 06 Nov 2021 - 08:53 pm
Peninsula

Kljuc Brdovecki , Croatia: Slovenia on Tuesday called in the army to help manage a surge of asylum seekers desperately trying to reach northern Europe ahead of winter, as the tiny EU state became the latest hotspot on the migrant trail.
"The last 24 hours have been the toughest and most demanding since the start of the crisis," the Slovenian government said, adding that parliament was set to vote on allowing soldiers to help border police in the crisis "under very specific circumstances".
Pressing the European Union for more solidarity, Ljubljana warned it was "delusional" to expect individual countries to tackle the bloc's greatest refugee crisis since 1945.
The crisis showed no sign of abating as Greece saw a clear "spike in arrivals" -- leaving 27,500 packed on the islands by Tuesday morning -- amid fears of worsening weather and closing borders, the UN said.
More than 600,000 migrants and refugees, mainly fleeing violence in Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan, have braved the dangerous journey to Europe so far this year.
The trip which most have made on inflatable boats from Turkey to Greece has left over 3,000 dead or missing.
The goal for many is the EU's biggest economy Germany, which expects to take in up to a million refugees this year. 
Chancellor Angela Merkel's open door policy has sparked a backlash at home, with 20,000 protesters massing in the city of Dresden on Monday evening to mark the anniversary of the anti-migrant PEGIDA movement.
Merkel supporters also turned out in force however, with counter-demonstrators almost matching the PEGIDA numbers.

Open! Open!
Tensions have built along the migrant trail after Hungary shut borders with Serbia and Croatia with a razor-wire fence -- pushing the flow westwards to Slovenia, which like Croatia has also limited arrivals.
Thousands of men, women and children have been left stranded in wet, freezing weather at Croatia's frontier with Serbia, after they travelled up through Greece and Macedonia.
Around 1,000 were waiting to cross into Croatia on Tuesday at the Berkasovo checkpoint after spending the night in the cold, an AFP correspondent said, adding that more buses with migrants kept arriving throughout the morning.
Dozens of tents have sprung up along the roadside, which turned into a mud field after hours of heavy rain.
Crowds chanted "Open! Open!" as security guards only allowed up to 50 people in every half hour.
"This is so cold. We couldn't sleep. I came 24 hours ago and spent night in a tent," Azme Solei from the war-ravaged Syrian city of Homs told AFP.
Solei said he had spent a year in a refugee camp in Turkey but decided to leave because of "unbearable" living conditions there. 
"I would like to go to Norway as I heard they behave nice towards refugees there," he said.

 

AFP