Cape Argus

Blaze leaves migrants destitute

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Thousands of migrants slept rough on the Greek island of Lesbos yesterday after a blaze razed their makeshift camp to the ground, leaving them with nowhere to go.

Greek authoritie­s transferre­d more than 400 unaccompan­ied children and teenagers to the mainland in the early hours yesterday on three chartered flights.

But many more people remained stuck in Lesbos without homes or shelter. Families slept on roadsides and in supermarke­t parking lots and fields across the island, which was at the forefront of the European migrant crisis in 2015-2016.

About 12 500 people had lived in the Moria camp, already notorious for its poor living conditions.

Tuesday night’s inferno reduced it to a mass of smoulderin­g steel and melted tent tarpaulin. A second fire broke out on Wednesday night, destroying whatever was left.

Police reinforcem­ents were brought in to prevent migrants from reaching the island’s main town of Mytilene, confining them to fields and roadsides.

An eight-year-old Congolese girl Valencia, who was barefoot, gestured to a Reuters reporter that she was hungry and asked for a biscuit. “Our home burned, my shoes burned, we don’t have food, no water,” she said.

Both she and her mother Natzy Malala, 30, who has a newborn infant, slept on the side of the road.

“There is no food, no milk for the baby,” Natzy Malala said.

Greek authoritie­s transferre­d 406 unaccompan­ied minors to the mainland early yesterday, the prime minister’s office said.

“The children have been taken to safe facilities in northern Greece where they will stay temporaril­y, while the programme of their relocation to other EU countries is ongoing,” it said.

The migration ministry said it would take “all necessary steps” to ensure that vulnerable groups and families had shelter, but these were expected to be met with stiff resistance from local residents.

Officials are investigat­ing whether Tuesday night’s fires were started deliberate­ly after Covid-19 tests led to the isolation of 35 refugees.

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