Aid workers in Lesbos have warned that refugee women are facing even harsher conditions this International Women’s Day. An escalation in violence has forced many humanitarian workers to withdraw.
Evacuations from Lesbos have drastically reduced access to food, sanitary products and medical help for desperate refugee women, aid workers told the PA news agency.
Clashes erupted between refugees and Greek authorities earlier this week, after Turkey opened its borders for people trying to cross into Europe.
Confrontation between a refugee and a Greek policeman during clashes at the port of Mytilene (Panagiotis Balaskas/AP)
Some aid workers were caught in confrontations after tensions spilled over with some Greek locals. Jemima Wilson, a Cardiff University medical student, said the organisation she was volunteering with had been threatened. And she said some NGO workers had been “ambushed”:
It was just escalating tension and violence towards NGO workers and so almost all of them have left
Freya Mergler, who works with Help Refugees, said the situation is in flux and “it’s a really uncertain time”. The knock-on effect for refugees has left those living in already difficult conditions in camps feeling “extremely distressed”, she added.
Thank you from the bottom of our hearts to all who have generously given to help us respond to the escalation of the refugee crisis in Greece ❤️
If you've been moved by scenes of refugees being attacked, sleeping rough & children held in pens, please give https://t.co/CrjOHBw2N4 pic.twitter.com/N4W02aZKiE
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Mergler said it’s made a challenging situation even worse.
Even before this violence broke out, the situation for women living particularly in camps is so dire…
There’s thousands of women, young women and children who are being left in these horrendous situations and it’s really heart-breaking to see.
She described toilet and washing facilities as “awful” due to the sheer number of people in the camps, despite the efforts of charities to improve them.
Refugees scuffle with Greek police at the port of Mytilene after locals block access to the Moria refugee camp (Panagiotis Balaskas/AP)
High risk of sexual violence
Both aid workers said the risk of sexual violence remains high in the camps. Wilson, who volunteers for Medical Volunteers International, said:
Most of the women I’ve met won’t leave the tent after dark, and they’re wearing nappies because they’re too scared to go out to the toilets because they’ll get raped
Mergler said women she’d spoken to in Moria camp “feel very, very under threat, constantly” from general as well as sexual violence.
Many refugees, who’ve fled with their families from Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq and Syria, have told aid workers of their horror at the conditions in Lesbos. And some have even expressed regret at travelling there. Mergler said:
People have said if they’d known it would be like this they would have stayed in their country, even if it’s war-torn, because the way that people are living is so… I’ve never seen anything like it
Both Mergler and Wilson said they hope the number of aid workers can return to full capacity soon to provide help in a desperate situation.