Human Rights Organization Documents
'Degrading and Inhumane' Immigration Detention Centers, Cites More Than 7,500
Arrested Since Thursday
(Washington, D.C.) -- Amnesty International today demanded that Greek
authorities halt a mass police crackdown on "irregular migrants"
following reports that more than 7,5000 foreign nationals, many of Asian,
African and North African origin, have been arrested since last Thursday.
According to Greek police, around 2,000 of those round up were found
with no papers and were placed in administrative detention, many held in
overcrowded conditions at the Attika Aliens police directorate and other police
stations in Athens. While many have since been released because they were found
to be legally residing in Greece, others have been transferred to police
academies in northern Greece which are being used as detention facilities.
"While Greece has the right to control migration, it does not have
the right to treat people like criminals purely because of the color of their skin,"
said Jezerca Tigani, deputy director for Europe and Central Asia. "The
scale of the police operation in Athens over the weekend raises serious
concerns about discrimination on the basis of perceived ethnicity."
According to reports, some people were transferred to police stations
despite showing papers proving their legal residence in Greece. In view of the
sharp rise of racially motivated attacks against foreign nationals in the past
year, Amnesty International said it is concerned that such a massive and
discriminatory operation will fuel further attacks and xenophobia.
"Greece may be going through financial difficulties while facing
one of the highest migration flows among E.U. countries, but these police
operations violate international human rights standards and should stop
immediately," said Tigani. "Such arrests may put at risk of
deportation individuals who are in need of international protection but are
unable to apply for asylum."
Asylum-seekers in Greece often face serious obstructions when attempting
to access asylum procedures. Long lines of asylum-seekers wait in appalling
conditions for two to three days outside the Attika Aliens police directorate
at Petrou Ralli in Athens to lodge asylum applications each Saturday morning. Despite
this, only a small number of applications are registered by the authorities
each week.
Two men (from Guinea and Cote d’Ivoire) were arrested and detained
during the recent sweep operations and sent to Attika Aliens police
directorate, where they were detained until last night and then transferred to
another facility in Northern Greece.
An Amnesty International delegation met with the two men last month
while they were waiting outside Petrou Ralli. One of them told Amnesty
International how he has repeatedly requested to apply for asylum during his
detention and that his requests were ignored by the police.
"The Greek authorities must ensure that anyone wishing to apply for
asylum is provided with effective access to it," added Tigani. "They
must act to ensure that immigration-related detention is used only as a last
resort; those detained should be notified of the grounds of their detention and
ensured access to their lawyer and the outside world."
An Amnesty International delegation witnessed the poor conditions in
immigration detention centers in Athens during a recent visit to the country
last week. The organization's delegates visited six detention facilities in
Athens, including Petrou Ralli, which is in need of repairs. In other
facilities, including those of New and Old Elliniko, conditions were inhumane
and degrading.
Amnesty International is a Nobel Peace
Prize-winning grassroots activist organization with more than 3 million
supporters, activists and volunteers in more than 150 countries campaigning for
human rights worldwide. The organization investigates and exposes abuses,
educates and mobilizes the public, and works to protect people wherever
justice, freedom, truth and dignity are denied.