IZMIR, Turkey – After facing Syrian government barrel bombs, the repression of Islamic State extremists and their effective expulsion from Lebanon, Syrian refugees trying to reach Europe by sea confront another nemesis – the Greek Coast guard, which, they say, is disabling their small boatst and setting them adrift in the Aegean Sea.
Refugees speak of repeated instances in Greek waters in which Greek forces fired guns in the air, shined bright spotlights on their beleaguered boats, and ordered them to jettison their fuel supplies. Then they moved their fast patrol boats alongside and take off at top speed, creating a stern wave that forces the boats back to Turkish waters.
“They pointed their weapons at us and told us to dump our gas in the sea,” said Abdul Hamid, 46, a driver from the Syrian town of Salqin in northern Idlib province, who was piloting the small inflatable boat, overcrowded with 60 people, including 12 children a week ago. It was six hours before the Turkish Coast Guard rescued them, he said. It was his second such experience, he said. Encountering the Greek Coast Guard is the “biggest risk” in the escape.
Ahmed Abu Abid, 40, an electrician from Damascus, described a similar incident on a different voyage.