- Title: EU border agency trials high tech controls as Afghan fighting spreads
- Date: 13th August 2021
- Summary: ATHENS, GREECE (AUGUST 11, 2021) (REUTERS) (SOUNDBITE)(English) GREEK MIGRATION MINISTER NOTIS MITARACHI SAYING: "Greece is actively protecting its external borders , its not only our borders its the borders of the European Union, and we are working together with Frontex in preventing illegal entries into the European Union. Having said that, we do have sufficient capacity in reception centres to address any pressure we might face."
- Embargoed: 27th August 2021 11:51
- Keywords: EU Greece border camps frontex migrants migration
- Location: ALEXANDROUPOLIS, EVROS, LESBOS, ELEFSINA AND ATHENS, GREECE/AT SEA
- City: ALEXANDROUPOLIS, EVROS, LESBOS, ELEFSINA AND ATHENS, GREECE/AT SEA
- Country: Greece
- Topics: Europe,Asylum/Immigration/Refugees,Government/Politics
- Reuters ID: LVA00BEQ45N47
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text: The EU's border agency is trialling new high-tech surveillance equipment to detect migrant boats, just as rapid gains by Taliban fighters in Afghanistan have raised the prospect of a surge in people fleeing to Europe.
A balloon system equipped with cameras is being tested at Alexandroupolis airport near the Greek-Turkish land border in northeastern Greece, and on the island of Limnos, with the aim of giving border officials a clearer view of approaching boats.
Planned before recent Taleban advances in Afghanistan, it is part of a wider effort that includes analysis of emerging pressures from the region.
"We are observing and following the developments specifically in Afghanistan and Tunisia which might have an effect on migratory flows towards the European Union," said Frontex spokesperson Piotr Switalski.
The integrated mix of cameras and thermovision sensors with links to ship transponders and satellite communications gives officials a real-time view of a 60 km (40 miles) circle of sea, covering 40,000 square km (15,000 square miles).
"Border surveillance in the maritime area should be greatly improved because of this innovative system," he said.
More than 400 Frontex officials with several dozen vehicles, including some equipped with thermovision technology, as well as eight patrol vessels, are stationed in Greece, which has been on the front line of the migrant crisis.
Both the agency and the Greek coast guard have been hit by accusations that Greece has pushed back migrants from Turkey while the border agency stood by, but both have denied acting improperly.
Several EU countries have stopped forced returns of Afghans refused asylum while the fighting intensifies. But Greek Migration Minister Notis Mitarachi said this week the EU could not handle another major migration crisis.
Greece, which has built high walls along its land border to deter migrants, says its tough stance has paid off, with incoming flows and camp populations decreasing this year. Mitarachi said camps did have the capacity however to take in more migrants if the country was faced by another influx.
After a slowdown last year when coronavirus lockdowns limited movement, irregular migrant arrivals into the EU through the western Balkans have almost doubled this year, Frontex said.
Switalski said arrivals in Greece spiked in July, with some 1,000 detections.
With 22,600 migrants found illegally entering the EU via the western Balkans from January to July, numbers are far from the levels of 2015, when more than 1 million people, mainly from Afghanistan, Syria and Iraq passed through Greece.
But what Switalski called the "tricky" geopolitical situation in the region around the EU has heightened fears of a repeat that could put welfare systems under strain and feed already strong political opposition to immigration.
(Production: Vassilis Triandafyllou, Deborah Kyvrikosaios, Alexandros Avramidis) - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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