Human rights groups condemn practice as evidence reviewed by the Guardian reveals systemic denial of entry to asylum seekers

At about 1am on 24 August, Ahmed (not his real name) climbed into a rubber dinghy with 29 others and left Turkey’s north-western Çanakkale province. After 30 minutes, he said, they reached Greek waters near Lesbos and a panther boat from the Hellenic coastguard approached.

Eight officers in blue shorts and shirts, some wearing black masks and armed with rifles, forced the group – more than half women and including several minors and six small children – to come aboard at gunpoint. They punctured the dinghy with knives and it sank. “They said they would take us to a camp,” said Ahmed. “The children were happy and started laughing, but I knew they were lying.”

Continue reading…

You May Also Like

Britain has an obesity crisis. We won’t solve it until we start listening to ‘nanny’ | Will Hutton

In failing to regulate the food sector, successive governments have allowed industry…

Betty Boothroyd – a life in pictures

First female speaker of House of Commons and ‘one of a kind’…

‘Bizarre’ UK comments about Australia’s trade minister a ‘serious setback’ to talks

Allies of UK trade secretary Liz Truss accused of launching an ‘unprovoked…

Just Stop Oil protesters disrupt London Pride over ‘polluting’ sponsors

Met police make arrests after activists block parade in Piccadilly by sitting…