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Hundreds of deaths in the Mediterranean

Our biggest fears seem to become confirmed. A few days ago we were in
direct contact with a refugee-boat carrying altogether about 500
travellers. They were towing a second refugee-boat, also with about 500
travellers on board. Rescue was not in sight and over many hours, the
situation grew more and more desperate until, eventually, the towed boat
capsized. Our contact to the boat later broke off (for our log book
entries, see:
https://alarmphone.org/en/2016/05/27/statement-in-light-of-the-current-situation-in-the-mediterranean-sea/?post_type_release_type=post).

Now the survivors have reached Italy and through their witness accounts,
it seems confirmed that hundreds died, maybe up 550 people. Some people
off the sinking boat seemed to have been able to swim to the first boat
and survive. Others were able to stay alive until rescue services
arrived. However, many more seem to have lost their lives. Some news
sources speak of 700 deaths over the past few days, others of 900
(http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-36408029).

Europe, these are your deaths. Once again you have turned the sea into a
deadly deterrent. You will again blame the smugglers for these
fatalities but we know that they are only a direct effect of your
policies, an industry that you keep subsidizing. We will struggle on to
counter your policies of deterrence, leaving-to-die and abandonment:

Ferries not Frontex!

WatchTheMed

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Pro Asyl Report: Greece – Vulnerable lives on Hold

Report of the PRO ASYL project “Refugee Support Program in the Aegean” (RSPA):

https://www.proasyl.de/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/2016-05-24-Vulnerable-lives-on-Hold-final.pdf

On March 8, 2016, following a gradual restriction since February 2016 of
access to the Balkan route based on ethnic origin criteria, the  border
between  Greece  and FYROM  (Macedonia)  was  closed  for  all
third-country  nationals.  In  the  aftermath of this closure, over
54,000 refugees – about 60% of who are women and children – have
suddenly become trapped in Greece. There are  hundreds  of  disabled and
elderly people, cancer patients and persons suffering from other severe
chronic or incurable  diseases, as well as psychologically traumatized
persons, pregnant women, families with new-borns and unaccompanied
minors. A very high percentage of them is estimated to be admissible for
family reunification or relocation. All these people are barely
surviving the inhumane and devastating conditions in the reception
centres, while at the same time the dirty deal agreed by Turkey and
Europe turned the hot spots on the islands  of the Aegean into
detention- and deportation centres, keeping out those who were planning
to follow.

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Boat with 500 Syrian and Iraqi refugees sank about 70 km North East of Zuwara, Libya

While Idomeni camp is evicted and the Aegean route is blocked: Another mass dying as direct consequence of EU migration politics?

Today early morning at 5:25 am CET the WatchTheMed Alarm Phone received a distress call coming from a satellite phone: two big wooden boats, carrying approximately 1000 refugees had started from Libya and their calls to MRCC Rome remained unanswered. Since then the activists of the Alarm Phone stayed in direct contact with the boat communicating with them in Arabic and regularly updating the MRCC Rome about the situation and especially their GPS-position. The first position was passed to MRCC Rome at 6:21 am CET.
At 8.45 we received another desperate call from one of the boats informing us, that the second boat sank and that hundreds of people are in the water and drowning.  Again the Alarm Phone alerted all authorities as well as cargo ships in vicinity about this dramatic SOS.
In the meanwhile obviously rescue operations started, but we fear, that this help will come too late for hundreds of refugees.

On the two big boats mainly refugees from Syria and Iraq were on their way to find safety. Until middle of March they came mainly via the Aegean Sea, a way that is now blocked by the EU and their new Turkish partners. Another time it is proved that to block refugees leads only to more dangerous trips and to more death.

To be more clear: We don’t claim that there is unwillingness or delaying from MRCC part. But we believe that there is still lack of rescue capacities. Already in the last two days more then 5000 refugees had been rescued when they desperately tried to escape from Libya towards Italy. Some of the rescue boats are still on their way to bring those rescued to Italy. A lot of private and commercial ships are ready to help in the rescue operations, but often they are not able to reach sinking boats quick enough. The only solution would be safe passages and ferries for all.

Ferries not Frontex!

WatchTheMed Alarm Phone

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Radio

Online radio of noborder camp 2016

Wednesday 25/5
On Wednesday 25/5 at 17:00 we will broadcast live from noborder20116 radio, a conversation between two comrades from Turkey regarding the prosecutions of activists in the refugee issue, the resistances and how to organize themselves in both countries.

Thursday 26/5

On Thursday 26/5 at 20:00 we will broadcast from noborder20116 radio the event-discussion that was held on May 13 ASOEE in Athens and was recorder by from Radiozones subversive Expression 93.8.

You can listen to our radio here.
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Keep quiet and eat soup

On 24th of May 2016, the Greek authorities at last started what they had long threatened: an eviction of the camp at Idomeni.

Greece’s migration spokesman said that everyone knew that “conditions would be much better” in the camps they’re being moved to. He promised “no violence would be used”, but also that he expected the 8000 people, who’ve been there for months, to be gone in “no more than a week.” To ensure that nobody sees just how peacefully Idomeni will be evacuated, all journalists and activists have been removed from the area.

An explanation as to how this paradox of nonviolently moving thousands who don’t want to go might be resolved was given by an MSF representative, who said the police siege of the camp “complicates food handout efforts and sanitation maintenance”.

It is a move similar to the one reported by refugees in Vial, Chios, when they were being told they had to go to the hotspot in Kos: “We don’t have water for using bathrooms or taking showers,” a refugee said. “We just have water for drinking. The police cut the water because, he told us, you must go to another island.”

These tactics would usually be called siege warfare, intimidation, abuse or, at the very least, antihumanitarian. But in the last months a school of thought has established itself that claims this is not fundamentally wrong, but merely a matter of procedure. Humanitarian work consists in finding a “good place”, as identified by volunteers or the authorities, and then moving refugees there. The wishes of refugees are simply ignored. This approach grows naturally in the context of European border politics, and we would do well to resist it.

Stand in line

It is not just the customary European feeling of superiority that nourishes this attitude. When I worked in soup kitchens this winter, it struck me how quickly a paternal, or even authoritarian, mindset could develop among volunteers. We, mostly white twenty-somethings, were the givers and they the receivers. We had things, they mostly didn’t. We could travel, rent places and drive cars, they mostly couldn’t. It was us who made them stand in line, who decided on their portions, who could decide if someone got one, two, or no cups of soup, who told them to line up single file, who ordered people that jumped queue to go all the way back and so forth. This superior position can easily progress into straight out bossiness, and I repeatedly, and in various places, saw volunteers screaming at refugees who were waiting in line to get a pair of underpants or a registration paper. It is a sight I’d like not to see again.

This denigration was sometimes systematized when NGOs and food distributors marked the fingernails or tagged bracelets of refugees to be able to give each person their fair share. The motive is pure, the practice is repellent. But when conditions are as they have been in Greece this winter, the dignity of refugees has to be weighed against the practicalities of humanitarian work. The conditions they’ve been thrown in by war at home and closing borders in Europe leaves us little room to maneuver.

The unfortunate result of this structure is that “humanitarianism” has become a very flexible word. When refugees were moved from Vial to the hotspot in Kos, it could be portrayed as having had a “humanitarian” aim, because they got more space in Kos. The fact that they were locked up, while in Vial they had been free to go out, has been explained to me by a volunteer as a minor and temporary inconvenience – not a fundamental abuse of the inmates’ rights and a denial of their autonomy. The fact that refugees in hotspots say they’re treated as “animals” is to many a matter of giving them more soup, more space, more blankets, rather than more dignity.

Nonpolitics

It is this redefinition of the word “humanitarian” as merely “comfort-provider” that allows the Greek authorities to present the evacuation of Idomeni’s residents to “more humanitarian” camps as helping the poor scared ignorant refugees make the wiser choice. (This is called acting as a “white savior”.) But it’s simply irrelevant how great the military camps are. The point is that refugees are not allowed a choice. What is missing here is what should be a fundamental principle of humanitarianism: not to oppose the will and desires of those subjected to it. Dragging adults as if they were beasts from one place to another is never helping them, no matter how great the place where they’re to be put.

When refugees occupied the port in Chios, it engendered a similar discussion. They had found a place where they could not be ignored, where the media talked with them, where their protests were seen. But volunteers and NGOs pleaded with them to go to “better” camps because there they’d have showers and warmer beds. As if that mattered! They chose to sleep on concrete, not because they were stupid or senseless, but because they wanted to make a political statement. But that fell on deaf ears of those volunteers who worked “nonpolitically”; who wanted to create comfort, not change society.

The roots of nonpolitical volunteering merit a discussion of their own, which I won’t go into here, but it roughly seems to mean working within the system, registering when you’re told to and not going where you’re not allowed. Sometimes people honestly just follow this simple idea, to find people in need and provide them with whatever makes them feel better.

Keep calm and eat soup

The risk nonpolitical volunteers run is to become handy implements of inhumane state policy, to end up working working under terms and conditions which in the long run destroy the hopes of refugees – and which will eventually remove any vestige of humanitarianism in the treatment they get.

The most obvious case of this is when volunteers tell refugees to keep calm. It is a typically nonpolitical strategy: if you keep calm, we’ll be better able to bring you soup. It completely misses the bigger picture: that refugees are being violently screwed over by the EU, and want to make their case to the European public. They can’t do it without media attention, and the media doesn’t show up without there being “an incident”. Refugees have to be crying, starving, shouting or drowning for there to be a story. As soon as “humanitarianism” has enveloped them in its suffocating embrace, they’re off the front page – and can wait silently for deportation. (It’s also worth mentioning that refugees in Vial greatly improved their conditions by literally breaking out of prison, after volunteers told them they’d be better of by “keeping quiet”.)

And thus, nonpolitical humanitarianism ends up achieving its opposite. By removing refugees from the political and media scene at the Chios port, by evicting them from Idomeni, from the squares and from the parks, by giving them just enough food to stave off starvation, the authorities have managed to shut them up.

Article by Benjamin Julian published first on 24. May 2016 in: refugeetrail.wordpress.com.

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25.5.2016 Updates from the eviction in Idomeni

http://moving-europe.org/25-5-2016-updates-from-the-eviction-in-idomeni/

On this site we are constantly collecting observations and information which residents of the camp send to us about the second day of the police operation in Idomeni.

Follow us as well on Twitter and #Idomeni.

15:00: Some buses from Idomeni are being brought to the camp Oreokastro. There are people already living there since a couple of days. One friend who has been staying there since some days describes the situation there:
“The camp has many problems, it is very small and does not have space for 1000 people. There is water here, in small tanks, but not enough. Often the water stops. Also we have problems with the bathrooms. There are not enough and they are not clean.  Now they are bringing more buses, but there is not enough space.”
Yesterday and the day before there were protests in the camp and people blocked the street. If more people come to the camp it will be over crowded and the conditions will deteriorate even further.
Nonetheless, there are signs of self-sustainability from the people. Some small businesses are already established, selling the most important things for people to cook for themselves. It shows how fast people are able to adapt to their new situation and take matters into their own hand, when the authorities fail to do so.

13:30: Our friends M., R. and A. are outraged as they learned where the authorities are bringing people. They are determined to leave on their own terms and to the place they want to go. This place lies in the North rather than in the South of Idomeni.

“Macedonia is better than where the police are bringing us now. One friend of mine, he went with the buses yesterday with his family to a camp close to Thessaloniki, it is so bad there, there is nothing there. Now, they want to go back to Turkey. Better Turkey than where they bring us now. It is really true, it is so bad there. And there are people that want to come back. They take taxis from Thessaloniki back to here, back to Idomeni.
It is very bad in Idomeni now too, very precarious. Because of the police, they scare people, scream. The camp is like a ghost town now. People don’t leave their tents. Nobody is on the streets. Yesterday, the police broke open the tents if people did not want to go. And they broke our tents. The new tents that we bought with our own money. We don’t want to go to the other camps. Our friends tell us they are so bad. We want to leave on our own terms, not be forced on buses and brought to a worse place. We will not go on the buses. We will find a way to leave on our own and find a good place for our selves.”

13:00: There are reports about people protesting in the buses, refusing to disembark. Apparently, people do not want to go to the Nea Kavala Camp, which is around 20km away from Idomeni, but demand to be brought to Thessaloniki.

11:00: Our friends from inside the camp are upset and desperate as the situation is deteriorating. H. complains „I am even not allowed to go to the toilet. I have diabetes and a heart condition but they don’t let me“. They panick as their friends are already trying to get back to Idomeni because of squalid conditions in the official camps: „They say it is like pig stalls, not for humans!“. Reportedly the evacuation slows down as people refuse to enter the official makeshift camp in Vagiochori.

09:00: The second day of the operation has started. Residents report on the return of the police to the camp. Apparently they are now evicting the tents on the railway tracks. According to Greek media new makeshift camps have been openend in Thermi, Efkarpia, Grevena and already existing ones have been extended in Larissa, Thessaloniki, Kalochori.

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Arrested for distributing a newspaper

Earlier today in Idomeni, police  arrested people  (greek and migrants) who were distributing in Eidomeni an antiautoritarian newspaper published in arabic (Apatris).

Apatris_arabic

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Statement of MovingEurope regarding the eviction of Idomeni

http://moving-europe.org/idomeni-eviction-on-early-tuesday-morning/

Since heavy clash’s between the Greek police and inhabitants of the make shift camp of Idomeni have erupted and most of the people had to experience police violence by tear gas (1). Idomeni hasn’t become calm. Meanwhile on the weekend intense rain transformed the camp in a mud place again (2), supporting structures got more and more limited access to the camp. Cars have been stopped, frisked and volunteers have been taken to police stations for several hours.

In the night to Monday, several sources were reporting about massive police force movements towards Idomeni in order to be ready for an upcoming eviction. According to media sources, it is highly likable that police is going to start the eviction on early Tuesday morning (3). Due to high pressure from the opposition and the latest heavy clashes in Idomeni, the government changed their mind on waiting for a volunteering closure of the camp. The police is hoping for a non-violent eviction, which is in the eyes of Moving-Europe nearly impossible since tension is high and frustration about the desperation which the Greek and European authority’s forced the inhabitants of Idomeni camp in is high. Members of supporting structures in and around Idomeni expressed to us their concerns about the physical and psychological conditions for the people if they going to be confronted with massive police and military forces. “It is insane to conduct an eviction at the moment. There are hundreds of family’s, thousands of children and many people in bad physical conditions, this will create enormous damage and raise frustration even more”. Referring to the current developments with the agreement between Turkey and the EU which seems to be at a crossroads (4), she adds: “Everything is unsure at the moment, we can’t understand why the authority is creating facts when there is everything instable and nothing working as they want”.

On Monday morning it was reported from Idomeni, that at several points, authority’s closed the waterlines (5). Next to the limitation of food supply, this gives an idea about how police is planning to empty the camp: Creating a lack of basic needs and force the people, particually the vulnerable people on leaving by them self, which accordingly to posts on social media is working for many people (6). This was also confirmed by an inhabitant of the camp on Monday morning on the phone: “There are several busses this morning waiting for people, I think several will take this, since it is maybe the last chance”. He adds that NGO’s are present, but one NGO worker told him that they probably can’t come from tomorrow on anymore.

CNN Greece reports, that the upcoming eviction might take up to 7 days and is following a strategy, which were brought to us as an rumor already two month ago: The forces will separate the camp in several sectors which will be isolated from each other, these sectors will be over several days emptied, outside the view of media and volunteers in order to avoid witnesses (7).
The future of the about 9.000 inhabitants of Idomeni camp is unsure. Some sources report people are going to be brought to Thessaloniki to guarantee health service and housing8, but supporters are doubtful that there are places for everybody, needless to say that situation in other camps is even worth to Idomeni and disillusioning.

Notes

[1] Statement by MSF: http://www.msf.org/en/article/greece-msf-resumes-activities-idomeni-after-clashes-and-tear-gas-cause-temporary-suspension
[2] Rain: https://twitter.com/Laura_Naude/status/734431370550861825
[3] http://www.spiegel.de/politik/ausland/fluechtlinge-in-idomeni-polizei-soll-camp-am-dienstag-raeumen-a-1093562.html
[4] http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/merkel-refugee-deal-with-turkey-in-danger-of-failure-a-1092331.html?platform=hootsuite
[5] https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=1579995312299371&id=1469254766706760
[6] https://www.facebook.com/yusufphotographie/posts/10154799444858906
[7] http://www.cnn.gr/news/ellada/story/33102/etoimazoyn-epixeirisi-ekkenosis-tis-eidomenis
[8] http://sputniknews.com/europe/20160523/1040067038/greece-evacuates-idomeni-camp.html

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Eidomeni to be evicted

Greek police leaked yesterday to the Press that Eidomeni will be evicted. Riot police was transferred from Athens to the area close to the camp. Today, “last preparations” should be done. The eviction is supposed to start tomorrow morning. According to the leaked info, the eviction will take three days or a whole week. This evening, roads to Eidomeni will be closed. The will try to kick out all media/NGOs/activists before they start the eviction.

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Talking with Refugees in Samos

The term ‘the system’ is one we have come across many times when talking with refugees and with poor people in many places and in various countries. It refers to the ways in which people understand the world and their place in it. It is also a description of the world in which they live under the gaze of teachers, police, social workers, border guards, prison officers, NGOs, bosses and supervisors and so on. It is the system that watches and humiliates and as one young Syrian refugee told us, it celebrates and feeds on wars. “Always war“ he said. “If it is not shooting you in your body, it is trying to destroy your brain and always shoots at our pockets.”

“We are used and abused by the system. The same system that has corrupted north Africa and so many other countries as well, and made it impossible to stay there with any life and freedom is here in Europe. I feel like there are lots of people and organisations living off my back as a refugee. I am being used all the time to make money by big organisations. I know that they get money to look after us. But where does it go. Why don’t we see it?”

His friend, another Moroccan student added; “the system tries to fuck us all the time. It wants to make decisions for all of us but shares nothing. It cares for money and control and not about us. Never. It fights humanity. It wants to destroy humanity. And they call this real life and democracy! Fuck them. “

“Why does this system trouble us so much?”

To which a local from Samos replied that he too was being screwed in his own country and that he too was suffering; “in this situation we must never blame each other. They want us to fight each other.” He continued, “I want to help the refugees here but there is so little I can do even to help myself.”

It was during this conversation that Imad from Algeria took out a paper and drew a pyramid. The top of the pyramid was not connected to the bottom three quarters of the pyramid. PyramidThe gap in between was bridged by a single ladder. And in the top piece Imad drew a giant eye. Hundreds of tiny pyramids filled the bottom three quarters “This is how I see the system. We the people live in the bottom part controlled by a few at the top. They have a giant eye which looks down on us and is always looking for ways to make money. To get out of the bottom part and into the top they have put a single ladder which only allows one person to pass at a time. There are 6 billion of us trying to get to that ladder. It’s chaos at the bottom of the ladder. At the same time they want us to be controlled by the tiny pyramids all around us – schools, police, army…- We are now governed by people we never know or even see.”

Humanity

Ask about the chief characteristic of the system and the conversation moves to discussions about humanity and inhumanity. These are the most common terms used. Basically the system is seen as lacking humanity and for many it is seen as being actively against humanity. It is cruel on every issue. What, as one Pakistani male refugee asked us can be more inhumane than making and stockpiling nuclear weapons? Or weapons of any kind, said another. Those who hold power simply don’t care about the lives of the majority. They never say simple things like lets help each other. They never stand with people who face difficulties. If they become rich they turn their backs and get to the front. But what saddened many in these discussions was the way in which the system tried and succeeded in dividing people; making people afraid of one another which “makes us forget to trust in each other”. “So many of us end up living in fear”.

The system is global. It touches everyone and everywhere. It has no nationality although some places like the USA, Europe, Russia and China, they tell us have been and continue to be powerful in its shaping. But from Morocco to Iraq, Algeria to Somalia, Yemen to Pakistan we hear the same kinds of stories of a system that only cares for the few and seems to hate the many. Theft of income from national resources takes place on a monumental scale. The people see these grand corruptions regularly go unpunished. It is a system where bribery is part of its blood system. In Algeria it is commonly understood that the bigger the theft the bigger the reward. But thieve a loaf of bread and prison waits. Respect for the law is a joke, for all the laws are made to protect the powerful. They are not our laws, we are told time and again.

Many of the refugees we have met come from countries with rich natural resources the most important being at this time oil and gas but also including a wide number of valuable minerals (gold for example in the case of Libya). This is not however a common treasury for the people but the ‘honey pots’ for which the system will happily bomb and destroy a country in order to keep them for themselves. “To have oil or gas brings big problems to our country. I wish we had beans instead” one Iraqi told us.

Shameless looting for private gain is how local elites sustain their lavish life-styles amidst widespread poverty. “They call themselves Algerian but they don’t live here like us. They have houses in France and the US. They can go anywhere. Not like us” (Imad). Some weeks ago Mamoud had told us that his home city in Punjab had an international airport for the exclusive use of the local rich and businesses. “Its full of private jets. I think most of the time they are used to take people shopping in the Gulf states or to sex resorts like Agadir in Morocco. We can’t use the airport”.

robbersThey are right of course to see how big money talks. When we tell them that the UK government fast tracks permanent residency permits for anyone prepared to invest 1.5million pounds in the UK they smile knowingly. Now Greece is also promising the same, although given the crisis here, the price is much lower at 250,000 Euros. No detention camps for the rich! Nor rubber boats and border controls either!

Whilst many we have talked with see wealth as theft – to become rich means making someone else poor – these discussions with refugees are often much more nuanced and influenced by the Islamic practice of zakat. “Zakat literally means “that which purifies”.Zakat is considered a way to purify one’s income and wealth from sometimes worldly, impure ways of acquisition. According to Murata and Chittick, ” just as ablutions purify the body and salat purifies the soul so zakat purifies possessions and makes them pleasing to God” (Wikipedia).  Zakat is essentially an annual religious tax of 2.5% of your assets above a set minimum which is then distributed to the poor. It is a serious obligation according to Islam and failure to pay zakat will weigh heavily against you at the time of judgement. Practices and amounts vary from place to place but it is estimated that zakat raises around (US)$200 billion a year which is 1.5 times the annual global humanitarian aid contributions. As a result many refugees from Moslem majority countries, whilst utterly rejecting wealth acquired through corruption and looting are more likely to judge the wealthy by what they do with their money rather than with uncompromising hostility. We have been given many examples of how zakat contributions can be critical to well being and provide valuable help to the poor including many in refugee camps in Lebanon, Jordan and Turkey.’ Needless to say zakat in reality is more uneven in its practice. But it does mean that a crucial humanitarian notion of obligation to the poor and the vulnerable is part of every day discussions about wealth and its meaning for society, which is now totally absent in much of the West.

Solidarity

In the summer of 2015 we happened to come across 44 refugees who had just landed from the usual unsafe and overloaded rubber inflatable. These are very emotional moments as the refugees are washed with relief at having made it without injury or loss of life as well as coming to terms with the terror they had just experienced. There is sobbing and laughter and all places in between. In this instance a brilliant MSF nurse once he had checked all was well got out his accordion and began to play folk dance music. The joy was explosive as we danced and hugged one another. It was amazing to see the transformation in all of us. No common spoken language but an elemental human connection crossing all barriers and bringing us together.

The system might have set its face against humanity but this is not true for vast numbers of people as we have seen so often especially in the past 18 months. But we should not be confused by the mainstream media’s celebration of the heroic efforts of so called ‘ordinary’ people embracing the refugees which has encouraged a view that this response was exceptional, unusual and unexpected. The truth is that human solidarity has always been central to the survival and well being of the poor. It happens all the time and continues to be a source of enormous joy and strength. It forms the protective shield which ensures that the system never crushes us all; that informs the bloody mindedness of the Berber insistence that “we never give up” and “never surrender”. As one Berber refugee from north Africa told us, the system “might get me but there are millions more behind me”. Similar processes and systems are evident daily amongst the local people of Samos who have seen their island destroyed by austerity and poverty. The daily patterns of life here are shaped by countless forms of solidarity (often family based) which directly confronts austerity with a ‘fuck you’ mentality. At the same time there has been the constant drum beat of the system here on Samos which blames the refugees for the collapse of tourism this year. It drips like acid trying to corrode our humanity.

Even so these solidarities provide or at least point to a vision of a society which gives hope. When we hear some of the refugees attacking the system we also hear them saying “it does not need to be like this” and most importantly we could do it much better. We have heard many refugees  tell us how their neighbourhoods which have been abandoned by the state manage themselves without the drama and theatrics of the system. It is not difficult therefore to understand why so many refugees say that they just want the system to let them be: get out of our lives; you only bring us difficulties and humiliations. Let us be so we can sort ourselves out. The millions of euros you spend on managing and controlling us bring only benefits to the system. Give us this money to make a fresh start in Europe and you will see what we can achieve for ourselves and in our new homes. “Stop making decisions for us. You never ask us what we want”. It is the same with many of the NGOs and human rights groups. “They claim to represent our interests. I never gave them this right”. “All their vests, jeeps, offices, workers, flags and logos are paid for from our backs. How does this help us?”

Open Eye Kitchen Samos

Open Eyes Balkan Route Kitchen, Samos

These discussions on Samos at least, were sharpened by the refugees’ experience of the two (No Borders and Open Eyes) kitchens which fed them for over 5 months. The contrast with the NGOs could not have been greater. The kitchens operated and functioned in total solidarity with the refugees. They became the only safe refugee places on the island where people could gather to drink tea, talk, play chess and share information. The food was prepared and cooked with the refugees. Preparing, cooking and then eating the meals was done with respect and dignity and had none of the frenzied, chaotic and inhumane characteristics common within the Camp. Moreover, the volunteers who established and managed the kitchens were in undivided solidarity with the refugees. Unlike most of the other NGO workers who have tight gagging clauses in their contracts which compels them to be silent, the Kitchen volunteers would not tolerate such limitations. The kitchens demonstrated the effectiveness of solidarity and humanity. They stood outside of the system and shared with refugees their disdain for what it does and what it stands for. ‘The system is just not capable of doing good. It needs to destroyed it cannot be reformed’.

Refugees preparing food at No Borders Kitchen, Samos

Refugees preparing food at No Borders Kitchen, Samos

This is but one example from Samos but there are countless others across the globe. Even in the most miserable places such as Idomeni and Calais we have seen refugees create in self managed camps schools, health centres, clubs, libraries, shops, bathing facilities and systems of mutual support which have made life bearable. Little wonder they resist being moved into the camps/ prisons run by the system. We do not lack for inspiration if we know where to look. Health programmes, schools, farming, and more, for the people and by the people based on solidarity and humanity shows us again and again how we can do things better and bring joy rather than misery to many people.

Listen to Us. Talk with Us!

But as some of the refugees we have met told us, so much about their lives and experiences are unknown to the majority of people. ‘They don’t know the difficulties we face neither the ways in which we survive as human beings and resist the attempts of the system to destroy us’. Because people are now so divided and separated in the places where they live, “things happen” which never get reported in the press or the TV. “In my neighbourhood in Algiers it is only poor people. Until we organised, the police were disturbing us every day. Many of them were violent. They came in the night. Broke our doors and messed our homes. This was happening all the time. But who knew? We did but we don’t count. There were no controls for the police. They knew they could batter us and they wouldn’t be stopped. That’s why we had to do something.”

Imad’s understanding can be applied to a huge array of the system’s operations. Take for example the on-going state of emergency in France. It is we are told a ‘popular’ policy gaining something like 91% approval ratings in opinion polls. But what of those who live in segregated minority communities who face the entire brunt of the police’s hugely extended powers to raid their homes and neighbourhoods without limit. (The French state announced to the Council of Europe on November 27th its decision to contravene the European Convention on Human Rights). Who apart from the British Moslem communities knows of the impact of the so called anti-radicalisation PREVENT policy which has now enlisted virtually every state worker (teachers, doctors, nurses, university staff…..) in the surveillance of young Moslems, looking out for signs of so-called terrorist contamination? And so it will continue as long as most of the population never get to see, let alone experience the negative consequences. As one young Moroccan refugee told us, “it is us today. But tomorrow?”

no-jungle-1401There are many good reasons why we should listen when refugees tells us that the world should start to look and learn from poor and the oppressed. Humanity, solidarity, care and compassion alongside a boiling fury at a system with stands against all these principles ran through our discussions. And it should be added, there is usually a lot of laughter too. The system is crazy they say. Just look at its response to the refugees – militarised borders, razor wire, prisons and closed camps, drones and navy patrols and no end to the bombing and destruction of our lands. It can only succeed by total destruction. “Do you believe that this system loves you? I tell you that this system is lying to you and using you against us, the refugees So we keep drowning. “We must not co-operate at all. We must never give up on our humanity !”

Revealing Truths: Talking with Refugees in Samos