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Greece Begins Clearing Migrant Camp Situated on Border

Greek authorities said they planned to move individuals gradually to state-supervised facilities further south.
Greek authorities said they planned to move individuals gradually to state-supervised facilities further south.
A refugee family carry their belongings during a police operation at a refugee camp at the border between Greece and Macedonia, near the village of Idomeni, Greece, 24 May. Credit: Reuters/Yannis Kolesidi
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A refugee family carry their belongings during a police operation at a refugee camp at the border between Greece and Macedonia, near the village of Idomeni, Greece, 24 May 2016. Credit: Reuters/Yannis Kolesidis/Pool

Athens: Greek police started clearing migrants and refugees out of a sprawling tent camp on the sealed northern border with Macedonia where thousands have been stranded for months waiting in vain for passage to Europe.

Reuters witnesses saw four to six bus loads of migrants leaving the makeshift camp of Idomeni early Tuesday morning, with about another dozen more lined up.

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Greek authorities said they planned to move individuals gradually to state-supervised facilities further south.

"The evacuation is progressing without any problem," said Giorgos Kyritsis, a government spokesman for the migrant crisis.

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A Reuters witness on the Macedonian side of the border said there was a heavy police presence in the area but no problems were reported as people with young children packed up huge bags with their belongings.

"Those who pack their belongings will leave, because we want this issue over with. Ideally by the end of the week. We haven't put a strict deadline on it, but more or less that is what we estimate," Kyritsis told Reuters.

Railway tracks between Greece and Macedonia have been blocked by migrants for more than a month, forcing trains to switch routes through Bulgaria further to the east. Some wagons loaded with goods have been stranded on the tracks for weeks.

(Reuters)

This article went live on May twenty-fourth, two thousand sixteen, at forty minutes past four in the afternoon.

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