Alternate Minister of National Defence Dimitris Vitsas, who is in charge of coordinating Greece’s management of the refugee flow, said that all procedures pertaining to asylum requests would be sped up and examined within the space of a fortnight.
“Asylum requests will have to be examined within a week – and there is international help for this purpose– and administrative appeals will be examined within another week,” Vitsas told a late-night political talk show on Star TV. The fast-tracked procedure will be formalised as part of a refugee bill to be submitted to parliament on March 30, he said.
Some 4,000 security personnel and asylum experts – many provided by fellow EU states – are to be deployed to registration centres known as hotspots on the five Aegean islands facing Turkey to handle the application requests.
Vitsas noted that there are currently 53,000 refugees and migrants in Greece, compared to 30,000 in late February before Balkan states began shutting their borders.
EU-Turkey deal
The minister said all those who entered the country after a new EU migration deal with Turkey began to take effect on March 20, and whose asylum applications are not accepted, will be returned to Turkey on six ships chartered by EU border agency Frontex.
Should the process work smoothly, some 20,000 people are expected to eventually stay in Greece for an unspecified time, a task the country can “easily manage,” the deputy minister said.
The government said it expects the EU-Turkey deal to be fully implemented from 4 April. Aid groups have criticised the agreement on ethical grounds, warning that registration sites would now become de facto detention centres.
Source: EurActiv
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