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How Med island once swamped by illegal migrants has seen arrivals shrink to ZERO in 2 weeks thanks to hardline approach
How Med island once swamped by illegal migrants has seen arrivals shrink to ZERO in 2 weeks thanks to hardline approach

The Irish Sun

time10-08-2025

  • Politics
  • The Irish Sun

How Med island once swamped by illegal migrants has seen arrivals shrink to ZERO in 2 weeks thanks to hardline approach

IT is a figure that Britain's embattled political leaders can only dream of. Asked how many small boats have landed in Crete since it suspended new asylum claims from North Africa — and vowed to arrest anyone entering ­illegally –— deputy mayor Eleni Zervoudaki responds with a resounding 'zero.' 7 Crete has enacted a new hardline stance on illegal migrants Credit: Getty 7 On July 6 2,000 migrants landed on the island Credit: AFP 7 The centre in Chania which housed detained refugees and is now deserted Credit: Ian Whittaker Standing inside an empty migrant detention centre near Chania in the northwest of the Greek island, she says the hardline stance has not only stopped thousands crossing from Libya, it has also smashed the ­smugglers' business model. Eleni is on the left of the political spectrum so not a natural ally of the centre-right New Democracy party that won a landslide victory at the national elections two years ago. But in an exclusive interview, she told The Sun: 'Our new policy is for illegal people to be arrested and they are not allowed to apply for asylum. 'From the moral side it's illegal and it's not right, but from the other side I can understand the government is searching for a way to stop illegal immigration. 'A turning point came on July 6 when 2,000 migrants landed and there were so many boats from Libya we had to find a response. 'The majority — about 900 at the peak — were held in this building. Locals were stressed and afraid. 'We are a tourist island and of course there were concerns about what would happen if the asylum seekers continued to come. 'There are two or three million migrants in Libya and we are the door to Europe for them — most want to go to Britain, Germany and France. 'For the past two weeks there have been no boats. "Before, they were landing once or twice a week. First migrants detained under Starmer's 'one-in-one-out' deal with France as MORE boats arrive in UK 'I think the new policy will damage the smugglers' business model, so maybe this is something the UK government can learn from us. 'But I'm sure the smugglers will come up with another plan because there is a lot of money at stake. 'Migrants from Pakistan and ­Bangladesh will pay up to 7,000 euros to cross to Europe.' The Sun's report comes after the Labour Government announced the start of its much trumpeted one-in, one-out deal with France, which has already been branded a 'farce.' The trial, which started on Tuesday, sees French authorities taking back a limited number of Channel migrants for each genuine refugee we accept in return. The Government says this will disrupt the smugglers' business model. But Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp said: 'Returning just six per cent of illegal immigrants, as reported, will have no deterrent effect whatsoever — because 94 per cent get to stay.' The Greek government faced a similar crisis when unprecedented numbers began to make the arduous, 100 nautical mile journey from Tobruk in Libya to Europe's southern- most island Crete. More than 10,000 had reached the island by last month, amid rumours the crossings were being organised by Libyan warlord Khalifa Haftar as part of a 'hybrid threat,' to place pressure on Greek politicians. But new migration minister Thanos Plevris responded by taking the type of decisive action many British voters are crying out for. 7 Crete's deputy mayor Eleni Zervoudaki Credit: Ian Whittaker 7 Coastguard Dimitra Hasioti has not seen any new boats arriving since July 25 Credit: Ian Whittaker On July 11, he suspended all new asylum claims for people arriving from North Africa for at least three months, adding that anyone landing illegally would be arrested and could face up to five years in prison if they did not agree to be deported. It is a similar response to the one Reform leader Nigel Farage has pledged to introduce should he win the next election, although he ­credited Australia's 'stop the boats' policy for inspiring his thinking. Oz PM Tony Abbott's hardline stance achieved instant results in 2013. Under Abbott's Operation Sovereign Borders policy, small boats were intercepted and passengers returned to Asia or taken to overseas island detention centres. It resulted in a 90 per cent reduction in arrivals by sea. So what have been the results of the law change in Greece? Between July 11 and July 25, a total of 13 boats carrying 843 migrants made it to Crete, according to the Hellenic coastguard. Since then — none. 'OVERWHELMED' Georgios Sergentanis, 32, volunteers for Crete's Civil Protection group, and says locals felt overwhelmed before the policy change. 'Our organisation would give the migrants food and water when they were brought to the port and I understand why people were so ­concerned. "For five days at the end of June, we had 300 or 400 arriving every day and it was too much. 'Civil protection was not prepared because we only have 15 members and we have other jobs, so only five of us could look after the migrants. "About 95 per cent of them were men and they would be tired and hungry because it takes between 30 hours and three days to reach Crete from Libya and it is tough. 'But many of them looked angry and we did fear for our safety, because there were only five of us and there could be 30 or 50 of them. It felt intimidating.' Maria Kafetzidaki, 42, works as a waitress at The Wave restaurant overlooking Halikia Beach in Paleochora in southern Crete, where migrants from countries including Sudan, Egypt, Afghanistan and ­Pakistan would land previously. She suspects the crossings will resume once the strong winds lashing the Mediterranean abate, but she added: 'We have had a few good weather days in the past two weeks and no one landed, so let's see. 'Before the law was introduced people were crossing every day when it wasn't windy. 7 Georgios Sergentanis says locals felt overwhelmed before the policy change Credit: Ian Whittaker 7 Waitress Maria Kafetzidaki works at The Wave restaurant overlooking Halikia Beach where migrants would land previously Credit: Ian Whittaker "When so many landed last month, people were ­concerned because it's not normal. 'Some locals were worried about the effect on tourism, and the fishermen told me they regularly had to intervene to stop people drowning. 'But I don't know if the government's new policy will work because these people are escaping from difficult situations.' Katerina Drakopoulou, a Crete-based lawyer with the Greek Council for Refugees, is firmly opposed to the 'inhumane' government policy and is calling for a reception centre to be built. She said: 'Our view is that it's completely against European, ­international and Greek law. It cannot be justified by any means. 'We are seeing the criminalisation of refugees because the smuggling networks are forcing people in desperate need, who don't have any money, to drive the boats. 'When they arrive, they are arrested and charged with smuggling, so access to asylum is being criminalised. "The excuse the ­government uses is the huge ­number of arrivals. "But the ­number this year is similar to last year — the only difference is they were arriving on Crete and it used to be the Aegean islands.' 'CONCRETE ACTION' But Sevi Voloudaki, Greece's Deputy Minister of Migration and Asylum, told The Sun: 'Crete is not an open frontier. "It is sovereign Greek and European territory. 'We defend those borders through planning, legality, and absolute operational effectiveness. "Not through rhetoric, but through concrete action. 'That is why the temporary ­suspension of asylum applications was introduced. "It was a necessary measure, taken in response to an exceptional situation, to safeguard national security and to protect the integrity of the asylum system from being exploited. 'Under the new legal framework coming into effect this autumn, anyone who does not have the right to remain will be returned. 'If immediate return is not ­possible, they will be detained.' Commodore Dimitra Hasioti is proud the Hellenic coastguard has not seen a single migrant ­drown since the new smuggling route opened two years ago. 'Since July 25, we haven't had any boats arriving and, while I can't say for certain why they have stopped, it might be because of the change in the law. 'It seems possible that we witnessed the last irregular entrants landing on Crete two weeks ago.'

How Med island once swamped by illegal migrants has seen arrivals shrink to ZERO in 2 weeks thanks to hardline approach
How Med island once swamped by illegal migrants has seen arrivals shrink to ZERO in 2 weeks thanks to hardline approach

Scottish Sun

time10-08-2025

  • Politics
  • Scottish Sun

How Med island once swamped by illegal migrants has seen arrivals shrink to ZERO in 2 weeks thanks to hardline approach

Since the end of July, a total of zero migrant boats arrived in Greece's largest island SEA CHANGE How Med island once swamped by illegal migrants has seen arrivals shrink to ZERO in 2 weeks thanks to hardline approach IT is a figure that Britain's embattled political leaders can only dream of. Asked how many small boats have landed in Crete since it suspended new asylum claims from North Africa — and vowed to arrest anyone entering ­illegally –— deputy mayor Eleni Zervoudaki responds with a resounding 'zero.' Advertisement 7 Crete has enacted a new hardline stance on illegal migrants Credit: Getty 7 On July 6 2,000 migrants landed on the island Credit: AFP 7 The centre in Chania which housed detained refugees and is now deserted Credit: Ian Whittaker Standing inside an empty migrant detention centre near Chania in the northwest of the Greek island, she says the hardline stance has not only stopped thousands crossing from Libya, it has also smashed the ­smugglers' business model. Eleni is on the left of the political spectrum so not a natural ally of the centre-right New Democracy party that won a landslide victory at the national elections two years ago. Advertisement But in an exclusive interview, she told The Sun: 'Our new policy is for illegal people to be arrested and they are not allowed to apply for asylum. 'From the moral side it's illegal and it's not right, but from the other side I can understand the government is searching for a way to stop illegal immigration. 'A turning point came on July 6 when 2,000 migrants landed and there were so many boats from Libya we had to find a response. 'The majority — about 900 at the peak — were held in this building. Locals were stressed and afraid. 'We are a tourist island and of course there were concerns about what would happen if the asylum seekers continued to come. Advertisement 'There are two or three million migrants in Libya and we are the door to Europe for them — most want to go to Britain, Germany and France. 'For the past two weeks there have been no boats. "Before, they were landing once or twice a week. First migrants detained under Starmer's 'one-in-one-out' deal with France as MORE boats arrive in UK 'I think the new policy will damage the smugglers' business model, so maybe this is something the UK government can learn from us. 'But I'm sure the smugglers will come up with another plan because there is a lot of money at stake. Advertisement 'Migrants from Pakistan and ­Bangladesh will pay up to 7,000 euros to cross to Europe.' The Sun's report comes after the Labour Government announced the start of its much trumpeted one-in, one-out deal with France, which has already been branded a 'farce.' The trial, which started on Tuesday, sees French authorities taking back a limited number of Channel migrants for each genuine refugee we accept in return. The Government says this will disrupt the smugglers' business model. But Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp said: 'Returning just six per cent of illegal immigrants, as reported, will have no deterrent effect whatsoever — because 94 per cent get to stay.' Advertisement The Greek government faced a similar crisis when unprecedented numbers began to make the arduous, 100 nautical mile journey from Tobruk in Libya to Europe's southern- most island Crete. More than 10,000 had reached the island by last month, amid rumours the crossings were being organised by Libyan warlord Khalifa Haftar as part of a 'hybrid threat,' to place pressure on Greek politicians. But new migration minister Thanos Plevris responded by taking the type of decisive action many British voters are crying out for. 7 Crete's deputy mayor Eleni Zervoudaki Credit: Ian Whittaker 7 Coastguard Dimitra Hasioti has not seen any new boats arriving since July 25 Credit: Ian Whittaker Advertisement On July 11, he suspended all new asylum claims for people arriving from North Africa for at least three months, adding that anyone landing illegally would be arrested and could face up to five years in prison if they did not agree to be deported. It is a similar response to the one Reform leader Nigel Farage has pledged to introduce should he win the next election, although he ­credited Australia's 'stop the boats' policy for inspiring his thinking. Oz PM Tony Abbott's hardline stance achieved instant results in 2013. Under Abbott's Operation Sovereign Borders policy, small boats were intercepted and passengers returned to Asia or taken to overseas island detention centres. It resulted in a 90 per cent reduction in arrivals by sea. Advertisement So what have been the results of the law change in Greece? Between July 11 and July 25, a total of 13 boats carrying 843 migrants made it to Crete, according to the Hellenic coastguard. Since then — none. 'OVERWHELMED' Georgios Sergentanis, 32, volunteers for Crete's Civil Protection group, and says locals felt overwhelmed before the policy change. 'Our organisation would give the migrants food and water when they were brought to the port and I understand why people were so ­concerned. Advertisement "For five days at the end of June, we had 300 or 400 arriving every day and it was too much. 'Civil protection was not prepared because we only have 15 members and we have other jobs, so only five of us could look after the migrants. "About 95 per cent of them were men and they would be tired and hungry because it takes between 30 hours and three days to reach Crete from Libya and it is tough. 'But many of them looked angry and we did fear for our safety, because there were only five of us and there could be 30 or 50 of them. It felt intimidating.' Maria Kafetzidaki, 42, works as a waitress at The Wave restaurant overlooking Halikia Beach in Paleochora in southern Crete, where migrants from countries including Sudan, Egypt, Afghanistan and ­Pakistan would land previously. Advertisement She suspects the crossings will resume once the strong winds lashing the Mediterranean abate, but she added: 'We have had a few good weather days in the past two weeks and no one landed, so let's see. 'Before the law was introduced people were crossing every day when it wasn't windy. 7 Georgios Sergentanis says locals felt overwhelmed before the policy change Credit: Ian Whittaker 7 Waitress Maria Kafetzidaki works at The Wave restaurant overlooking Halikia Beach where migrants would land previously Credit: Ian Whittaker "When so many landed last month, people were ­concerned because it's not normal. Advertisement 'Some locals were worried about the effect on tourism, and the fishermen told me they regularly had to intervene to stop people drowning. 'But I don't know if the government's new policy will work because these people are escaping from difficult situations.' Katerina Drakopoulou, a Crete-based lawyer with the Greek Council for Refugees, is firmly opposed to the 'inhumane' government policy and is calling for a reception centre to be built. She said: 'Our view is that it's completely against European, ­international and Greek law. It cannot be justified by any means. 'We are seeing the criminalisation of refugees because the smuggling networks are forcing people in desperate need, who don't have any money, to drive the boats. Advertisement 'When they arrive, they are arrested and charged with smuggling, so access to asylum is being criminalised. "The excuse the ­government uses is the huge ­number of arrivals. "But the ­number this year is similar to last year — the only difference is they were arriving on Crete and it used to be the Aegean islands.' 'CONCRETE ACTION' But Sevi Voloudaki, Greece's Deputy Minister of Migration and Asylum, told The Sun: 'Crete is not an open frontier. "It is sovereign Greek and European territory. Advertisement 'We defend those borders through planning, legality, and absolute operational effectiveness. "Not through rhetoric, but through concrete action. 'That is why the temporary ­suspension of asylum applications was introduced. "It was a necessary measure, taken in response to an exceptional situation, to safeguard national security and to protect the integrity of the asylum system from being exploited. 'Under the new legal framework coming into effect this autumn, anyone who does not have the right to remain will be returned. Advertisement 'If immediate return is not ­possible, they will be detained.' Commodore Dimitra Hasioti is proud the Hellenic coastguard has not seen a single migrant ­drown since the new smuggling route opened two years ago. 'Since July 25, we haven't had any boats arriving and, while I can't say for certain why they have stopped, it might be because of the change in the law. 'It seems possible that we witnessed the last irregular entrants landing on Crete two weeks ago.'

How Med island once swamped by illegal migrants has seen arrivals shrink to ZERO in 2 weeks thanks to hardline approach
How Med island once swamped by illegal migrants has seen arrivals shrink to ZERO in 2 weeks thanks to hardline approach

The Sun

time10-08-2025

  • Politics
  • The Sun

How Med island once swamped by illegal migrants has seen arrivals shrink to ZERO in 2 weeks thanks to hardline approach

IT is a figure that Britain's embattled political leaders can only dream of. Asked how many small boats have landed in Crete since it suspended new asylum claims from North Africa — and vowed to arrest anyone entering ­illegally –— deputy mayor Eleni Zervoudaki responds with a resounding 'zero.' 7 7 7 Standing inside an empty migrant detention centre near Chania in the northwest of the Greek island, she says the hardline stance has not only stopped thousands crossing from Libya, it has also smashed the ­smugglers' business model. Eleni is on the left of the political spectrum so not a natural ally of the centre-right New Democracy party that won a landslide victory at the national elections two years ago. But in an exclusive interview, she told The Sun: 'Our new policy is for illegal people to be arrested and they are not allowed to apply for asylum. 'From the moral side it's illegal and it's not right, but from the other side I can understand the government is searching for a way to stop illegal immigration. 'A turning point came on July 6 when 2,000 migrants landed and there were so many boats from Libya we had to find a response. 'The majority — about 900 at the peak — were held in this building. Locals were stressed and afraid. 'We are a tourist island and of course there were concerns about what would happen if the asylum seekers continued to come. 'There are two or three million migrants in Libya and we are the door to Europe for them — most want to go to Britain, Germany and France. 'For the past two weeks there have been no boats. "Before, they were landing once or twice a week. 'I think the new policy will damage the smugglers' business model, so maybe this is something the UK government can learn from us. 'But I'm sure the smugglers will come up with another plan because there is a lot of money at stake. 'Migrants from Pakistan and ­Bangladesh will pay up to 7,000 euros to cross to Europe.' The Sun's report comes after the Labour Government announced the start of its much trumpeted one-in, one-out deal with France, which has already been branded a 'farce.' The trial, which started on Tuesday, sees French authorities taking back a limited number of Channel migrants for each genuine refugee we accept in return. The Government says this will disrupt the smugglers' business model. But Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp said: 'Returning just six per cent of illegal immigrants, as reported, will have no deterrent effect whatsoever — because 94 per cent get to stay.' The Greek government faced a similar crisis when unprecedented numbers began to make the arduous, 100 nautical mile journey from Tobruk in Libya to Europe's southern- most island Crete. More than 10,000 had reached the island by last month, amid rumours the crossings were being organised by Libyan warlord Khalifa Haftar as part of a 'hybrid threat,' to place pressure on Greek politicians. But new migration minister Thanos Plevris responded by taking the type of decisive action many British voters are crying out for. 7 On July 11, he suspended all new asylum claims for people arriving from North Africa for at least three months, adding that anyone landing illegally would be arrested and could face up to five years in prison if they did not agree to be deported. It is a similar response to the one Reform leader Nigel Farage has pledged to introduce should he win the next election, although he ­credited Australia's 'stop the boats' policy for inspiring his thinking. Oz PM Tony Abbott's hardline stance achieved instant results in 2013. Under Abbott's Operation Sovereign Borders policy, small boats were intercepted and passengers returned to Asia or taken to overseas island detention centres. It resulted in a 90 per cent reduction in arrivals by sea. So what have been the results of the law change in Greece? Between July 11 and July 25, a total of 13 boats carrying 843 migrants made it to Crete, according to the Hellenic coastguard. Since then — none. 'OVERWHELMED' Georgios Sergentanis, 32, volunteers for Crete's Civil Protection group, and says locals felt overwhelmed before the policy change. 'Our organisation would give the migrants food and water when they were brought to the port and I understand why people were so ­concerned. "For five days at the end of June, we had 300 or 400 arriving every day and it was too much. 'Civil protection was not prepared because we only have 15 members and we have other jobs, so only five of us could look after the migrants. "About 95 per cent of them were men and they would be tired and hungry because it takes between 30 hours and three days to reach Crete from Libya and it is tough. 'But many of them looked angry and we did fear for our safety, because there were only five of us and there could be 30 or 50 of them. It felt intimidating.' Maria Kafetzidaki, 42, works as a waitress at The Wave restaurant overlooking Halikia Beach in Paleochora in southern Crete, where migrants from countries including Sudan, Egypt, Afghanistan and ­Pakistan would land previously. She suspects the crossings will resume once the strong winds lashing the Mediterranean abate, but she added: 'We have had a few good weather days in the past two weeks and no one landed, so let's see. 'Before the law was introduced people were crossing every day when it wasn't windy. 7 "When so many landed last month, people were ­concerned because it's not normal. 'Some locals were worried about the effect on tourism, and the fishermen told me they regularly had to intervene to stop people drowning. 'But I don't know if the government's new policy will work because these people are escaping from difficult situations.' Katerina Drakopoulou, a Crete-based lawyer with the Greek Council for Refugees, is firmly opposed to the 'inhumane' government policy and is calling for a reception centre to be built. She said: 'Our view is that it's completely against European, ­international and Greek law. It cannot be justified by any means. 'We are seeing the criminalisation of refugees because the smuggling networks are forcing people in desperate need, who don't have any money, to drive the boats. 'When they arrive, they are arrested and charged with smuggling, so access to asylum is being criminalised. "The excuse the ­government uses is the huge ­number of arrivals. "But the ­number this year is similar to last year — the only difference is they were arriving on Crete and it used to be the Aegean islands.' 'CONCRETE ACTION' But Sevi Voloudaki, Greece's Deputy Minister of Migration and Asylum, told The Sun: 'Crete is not an open frontier. "It is sovereign Greek and European territory. 'We defend those borders through planning, legality, and absolute operational effectiveness. "Not through rhetoric, but through concrete action. 'That is why the temporary ­suspension of asylum applications was introduced. "It was a necessary measure, taken in response to an exceptional situation, to safeguard national security and to protect the integrity of the asylum system from being exploited. 'Under the new legal framework coming into effect this autumn, anyone who does not have the right to remain will be returned. 'If immediate return is not ­possible, they will be detained.' Commodore Dimitra Hasioti is proud the Hellenic coastguard has not seen a single migrant ­drown since the new smuggling route opened two years ago. 'Since July 25, we haven't had any boats arriving and, while I can't say for certain why they have stopped, it might be because of the change in the law. 'It seems possible that we witnessed the last irregular entrants landing on Crete two weeks ago.'

Hundreds of migrants rescued off Greek islands of Crete and Gavdos
Hundreds of migrants rescued off Greek islands of Crete and Gavdos

Euronews

time07-07-2025

  • Politics
  • Euronews

Hundreds of migrants rescued off Greek islands of Crete and Gavdos

Greece has rescued hundreds of migrants in the waters close to Crete and the nearby island of Gavdos since Friday, local authorities have reported, amid warnings that the number of arrivals could rise sharply in upcoming weeks. More than 1,500 people reached Crete in the past three days, the authorities there said on Monday. Separately, around 230 migrants were saved from the seas near Gavdos, Greece's most southern island. The rescues came as Crete reported a sharp uptick in arrivals, with more than 6,500 migrants reaching the island in the first half of 2025, surpassing the total for the whole of the previous year. Authorities were struggling to house this number of people, Deputy Mayor Eleni Zervoudaki told ERT Chania. Approximately 182 people have been directed to temporary reception centre set up by the municipality of Chania, with 600 expected to gather there by Monday evening. 'We are being called upon to manage a crisis,' Zervoudaki said, warning that the number of arrivals could increase "dramatically." Last month, Athens said it would deploy two frigates and an additional vessel off Libyan waters to deter people from making the journey to Crete and Gavdos. Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakisto has urged authorities in Libya to take stronger action to address the flow of migrants attempting to travel from the country to Greece. Greece will use "all measures at its disposal, both carrot and stick, to ensure a new migration route to Crete is not established", Mitsotakis warned on Friday.

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