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Friday, September 4, 2015

Refugee crisis: 'Europe's biggest test since second world war' – live updates

Special coverage as David Cameron prepares details of a climbdown on accepting more refugees and a standoff between migrants and the authorities in Hungary continues 8.09am BST Through the day we’ll be hearing from individual refugees about their extraordinary journeys. Some, like the Kurdi family, risked all in hopeless boats. Others have walked the length of countries and haven’t slept in a bed for months. Mohamad Hesham Moadamani’s tale is instructive. The 24-year-old Syrian spent six hours trying to swim from Turkey to Greece before being rescued by a boat. It was just the beginning, as he told KATE CONNOLLY, the Guardian’s Berlin correspondent. They gave us papers and we went to Athens and from there to Thessaloniki. From there we had a long walk. We reached the Macedonian border at 3am. Our feet were really cut and sore. We managed to get into Serbia and from there had to think of how we’d cross Hungary without being obliged to apply for asylum there. We booked tickets for a bus to the border. After spending a night in the forest, we changed into fresh clothes so we wouldn’t look like migrants. But we were picked up by the Hungarian police and taken to jail in Budapest. That night they let us go. A taxi agreed to take us for €500 per person from Budapest to Germany. After two hours we were in Germany. After just a few metres we were met by the police, who immediately arrested our drivers and asked us: “Are you Syrians?” We said yes we are. “You are welcome to Germany,” they told us. They were smiling and I felt relaxed and safe. Finally I’m in Germany, living in Lübeck and waiting to get a residency permit and to start learning German so that I can pursue my education and find better opportunities. 8.07am BST Our migration correspondent, Patrick Kingsley, has set out 10 ways to manage the crisis. Here’s the first: The reason this summer’s migration crisis has slowly spread from the islands of Greece to the sports halls of Germany, via Austria’s motorways and Hungary’s train stations, is because some European countries treat refugees more humanely than others. As a result, refugees are aiming for the places that will give them the most stability. Sweden offers indefinite residence to Syrians, while other nations don’t, for instance, while some countries are faster at reuniting children with parents who have gone on ahead to seek asylum. So the best way to ensure refugees don’t hop between European countries is not to build fences, which encourages more dangerous forms of smuggling, but to ensure that the asylum system in every EU state operates to the same high standards, gives refugees the same level of benefits and grants the same length of residency. A common policy would also ensure that refugees were distributed proportionally throughout the EU. As it is some countries, particularly Greece and Italy, share a disproportionately large of the burden of the crisis. Continue reading...


READ THE ORIGINAL POST AT www.theguardian.com