Belarus border camp cleared as Iraqis fly home from migrant stand-off
SOKOLKA-Agence France-Presse
Hope for de-escalating the crisis, which has seen thousands camping in desperate conditions on the border for weeks, had been mounting in recent days, after German Chancellor Angela Merkel spoke with Belarus leader Alexander Lukashenko twice by phone.
The EU accuses Belarus of engineering the situation at the border in retaliation for sanctions on the ex-Soviet country. Minsk and its main ally Russia have rejected the charges and criticized the EU for not taking in the migrants seeking to cross over.
Around 2,000 people, mainly Iraqi Kurds, had been stuck in freezing temperatures at a camp in the woods near Brouzgui crossing point, hoping to pass into EU member state Poland.
But on Nov. 18 the Belarusian border force announced that the camp had been cleared, with its occupants relocated "on a voluntary basis" to a reception center nearby where they were given hot food and warm clothes.
Pictures of the camp looking abandoned were released and Polish authorities confirmed it had been emptied.
The relocation came the same day as the first repatriation flight from Belarus, carrying 431 people, landed in Iraq.
"The situation was very bad, we had to eat grass and leaves from the trees, and it was cold," one returning resident of Arbil told AFP.
In another sign of the grim conditions at the border, a Polish NGO said it had found a Syrian couple who had lost their one-year-old child while sleeping in the forest on the border for a month.
The flight came a day after the second of Merkel and Lukashenko’s calls - the first time the Belarus leader has spoken with a Western leader since disputed presidential elections last year.
On Nov. 18, Lukashenko’s spokeswoman Natalya Eismont said that there were about 7,000 migrants in the country, including those at the border.
She said Belarus would take responsibility for sending 5,000 of the migrants home if they want to go, and alleged Merkel would negotiate with the EU on creating a humanitarian corridor to Germany.
But Berlin denied any agreement with Lukashenko on the possibility of such a corridor, saying it "stood by" its neighbour Poland.
Poland’s Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki had earlier cautioned against holding direct talks with Minsk, saying it would legitimise Lukashenko’s regime.
The Polish government has also warned against any agreement on the crisis that might be struck "over our heads".
Warsaw warned Minsk that if the crisis was not resolved by Sunday, it would halt rail traffic with Belarus.
The EU and the United States also issued fresh warnings on Nov. 18.
The EU and foreign ministers of the G7 global powers called on Lukashenko’s regime "to cease immediately its aggressive and exploitative campaign".
U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken told reporters on a visit to Nigeria that the U.S. could add to sanctions already imposed on the country.
"This effort to weaponize migration has to stop," he said. "First and foremost, it is doing a terrible injustice to these people that it has victimized by making them pawns."
The Polish border guard said on Nov. 18 that 200 migrants were detained after entering the country illegally, part of a group of around 500 who had attempted the crossing.
The defense ministry alleged Belarusian special forces had led the attempt, saying they had first carried out reconnaissance and "most likely" damaged the barbed wire fence along the border.
"Then the Belarusians forced the migrants to throw stones at Polish soldiers to distract them. The attempt to cross the border took place several hundred meters away," it said.
It added that a family of five people, including three children aged between seven and nine, had been injured in the incident and were taken to hospital.
Polish media say at least 11 migrants have died since the crisis began in August.
The president of the European Parliament, David Sassoli, called for "the inhumanity" to stop.
"It is heartbreaking seeing a child die in the cold at the EU’s doorstep," he said on Twitter.