The European Union’s top migration official says deportations will intensify after the first group of refugees were returned to Turkey from Greece this week.
EU Migration Commissioner Dimitris Avramopoulos told a news conference on Wednesday the expulsions were just beginning and the numbers were still “very low”.
“But it’s better to start working slowly. I believe in the course of time we will scale up… It’s a good start,” he said.
Avramopoulos was in Turkey’s capital Ankara earlier this week to demand the country introduce legal protections for asylum-seekers before the EU began sending them back.
The Greek diplomat said that was still indispensable for larger-scale returns to start.
Reports recently surfaced that Turkey had been rounding up and expelling Syrian refugees back to their war-torn country, allegations that Ankara has denied.
Three days after the deportation order came into force, new arrivals on the Greek islands from Turkey dropped to 68 in the 24 hours to Wednesday morning from 225 the previous day, data from the Greek migration ministry showed.
Visiting the Finnish capital Helsinki on Wednesday, Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said the agreement “is functioning and the [number of] illegal migrants is in decline”.
Crossing the Aegean
Al Jazeera’s Harry Fawcett, reporting from the coast of Badem in Turkey, said refugees were still making attempts to cross the Aegean Sea.
According to reports, large-scale deportations from Greece could restart as early as Friday. But Nikos Xydakis, junior foreign minister for European affairs, hinted there could be a two-week “lag” because of a last-minute flurry of asylum applications by refugees who are trying to avoid expulsion.
“We knew there would be a lag, an intermediate period before the programme takes off, of at least two weeks to get through the first batch of applications,” Xydakis told reporters.
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