Greece pledges to help islands of Crete, Gavdos handle surge in migrant arrivals

Reuters

Published Apr 01, 2024 19:17

ATHENS (Reuters) - Greece's conservative government promised on Monday to offer extra financial aid and more staff to help the island of Crete and its tiny neighbour Gavdos handle a steep rise in arrivals of migrants trying to cross to Europe from Libya.

In recent months, the islands of Crete and Gavdos, the southern point of Greece and Europe, have seen an unprecedented surge in migrant flows mostly from Egypt, Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Since January, more than 1,180 migrants have arrived on both islands, up from 686 for full-year 2023, Greek coast guard data showed. Neither Gavdos nor Crete have migrant reception facilities.

"Crete will not be left alone and even more so Gavdos, which is a very small island with few permanent residents," Migration Minister Dimitris Kairidis said after visiting both places.

"We are here to help the local community. The resources and the means are there."

Last month, the European Union announced a 7.4 billion euro ($8.1 billion) funding package and an upgraded relationship with Egypt, part of a push to stem migrant flows to Europe criticised by rights groups.