Freezing temperatures and heavy snowfall are making life even harder for thousands of refugees living in limbo across Europe.
The cold snap gripping Europe has left dozens of people dead, including refugees in Bulgaria, according to Agence France-Presse.
Snow blanketed the Moria refugee camp on the Greek island of Lesbos, home to more than 4,000 people, on Friday.
A spokesman for the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) told CNN Monday that the organization was transferring some 120 vulnerable men, women and children, including people still living in tents, to hotels following the storm.
“There are no refugees or migrants living in the cold anymore,” Mouzalas told journalists at a news conference Thursday. According to local reports, Mouzalas suggested that there were only a handful of tents left in Vayiohori, near Thessaloniki, and Athens.
A Lesbos resident and volunteer, Philippa Kempson, shared video with CNN showing the shocking conditions at Moria camp, where some tents appeared to have collapsed underneath the weight of the snow.
“I’m amazed no one is dead yet,” she said. Kempson and her husband Eric have been helping with relief efforts on the island since the refugee crisis escalated two summers ago. They said that this is the worst winter they have experience on Lesbos for 15 years.
“The weather has been bad for quite a long time now. People think that Greece is eternal summer and beaches. It’s not like that,” Carlquist said.
Lia Gogou, a researcher working with Amnesty International who was in Moria in early December, said that even people sleeping in containers aren’t able to keep warm. Amnesty International is campaigning for asylum seekers to be transferred from the Greek islands to the mainland.
UN warns of temperature drop
UNHCR spokesman Adrian Edwards made a similar plea at a briefing Friday, one day before the arctic blast slammed Europe.
“The UN Refugee Agency is today reiterating its call to accelerate the moving of asylum seekers from the Aegean islands to the Greek mainland,” Edwards said at the Palais des Nations in Geneva. “The need for better protection will become all the more acute this weekend when temperatures on the islands are expected to drop. We are worried.”
Transfers of asylum seekers to the mainland are only allowed after people have completed the registration process, which has been delayed by a number of factors, including a shortage of spaces on the mainland.
“It’s completely inhumane. People are getting stuck here for a year. How do you expect people to survive?” Carlquist said. “What we have here is not even a refugee situation anymore… it is thousands of homeless people with no future.”
Aspasia Kakari, a communications manager at Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF or Doctors Without Borders), told CNN that, given these funds, the dire conditions at camps like Moria were completely avoidable.
“If it gets any worse, we will start to see completely preventable deaths,” Kakari said.
Asylum seekers across Europe face deadly cold
Refugees elsewhere in Europe are not faring much better amid plummeting temperatures.
German federal police said that they discovered 19 asylum seekers — including five children — suffering from hypothermia after they were abandoned at a highway stop in Bavaria in -4°F (-20°C) weather on Sunday. Their driver had abandoned the truck, leaving the group in an unheated cargo area for hours.
Several hundred asylum seekers sheltering in an abandoned warehouse in Belgrade are facing extreme cold temperatures. Aid workers in the Serbian capital say that the refugees are lighting fires in the warehouse in order to keep warm, and many have fallen ill.
“It’s amazing how people are still surviving in these conditions,” Todor Gardos, an Amnesty International researcher told CNN.