Turkish authorities rounded up some
1,300 migrants on Monday that they said were planning to sail to Greece
from hideouts near secluded Aegean beaches and forests, hours after
striking a deal with the European Union on stemming refugee flows. Turkish
gendarmes apprehended hundreds of Syrians, Iraqis, Iranians and Afghans
and three human traffickers, near the town of Ayvacik in Canakkale
province, coastguard officials told Reuters.
In
the largest operation of its kind in recent months, the migrants were
sent to a repatriation center where some could face deportation, the
officials said.
Turkish Prime
Minister Ahmet Davutoglu on Sunday struck a deal with EU leaders to
prevent migrants from traveling to Europe in return for 3 billion euros
(dollars) in cash, a deal on visas and renewed talks on joining the
28-nation bloc.
A record 500,000
people fleeing a four-year civil war in Syria have traveled through
Turkey then risked their lives to reach Greece in rickety boats this
year, their first stop in Europe before traveling north.
Nearly 600 people
have died on the so-called eastern-Mediterranean route, according to the
International Organization for Migration.
Turkey is home to more than 2 million refugees as well as thousands of refugees from Iraq and Afghanistan.
No comments:
Post a Comment