Friday, April 19, 2024 | Shawwal 9, 1445 H
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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Migrants lead hell of a life in heart of Europe

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Nicolas Gaudichet et Jovan Matic -


Exhausted from being stuck in Serbia for months, dozens of young migrants survive in appalling conditions in Sid, a small town bordering European Union member Croatia, which they try to enter every day.


Every morning in the freezing winter cold they head to a closed printing factory, the last stop before the border with the EU.


Under police watch and sometimes harangued by locals, volunteers from western countries give the travellers coffee, apples, eggs and water for a wash.


Some migrants who camp in the nearby forest, away from the police gaze, have a long walk. Their clothes are muddy, their faces worn.


“I am broken,” said a 28-year old Afghan who introduced himself as “Sirg” and spoke of cold Serbian nights in the woods.


“We think tomorrow we will be dead,” he said.


He said he had tried more than 60 times to reach Croatia, even making it to Slovenia once. But every time he was intercepted and sent back to Serbia.


According to Andrea Contenta of Doctors Without Borders (MSF), some 5,000 migrants are currently stuck in Serbia, mostly in official reception centres.


Some 500 sleep rough in Sid, others are in Belgrade or the northern town of Sombor.


Their chances of getting out of Serbia are steadily diminishing with borders increasingly better protected.


Time saps their strength, they sometimes get sick — and money is scarce.


“We try every day. We are tired,” says Hamza, 27, from the Algerian town of Biskra, who hopes to go to Belgium.


Croatian police intercepted him and sent him back overnight but he will try again the same day once he has warmed up.


Sometimes fights break out between men of different nationalities.


Last week, a north-African was stabbed in the heart and evacuated to a hospital in Novi Sad, the capital of Serbia’s northern Vojvodina region that borders Croatia and Hungary.


A 21-year old Algerian, who introduced himself as Miki Salem, had his arm in a sling and bandages on his buttocks where he said he was stabbed. “These were Afghans, it was not a fight, it was an attack for money,” he recalled.


“We cannot stay here, this is a shitty life!” the pastry chef, who rules out going home, added.


Once the winter becomes too harsh he will find a shelter in Belgrade then come back in March. — AFP


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