Borderline Practices
4 August 2005
Source: E KATHIMERINI
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By Stavros Tzimas
As every year at this time, traffic peaks at Greece’s northern border
crossings, as Albanians, Bulgarians, *Slav-Macedonians, Serbs,
Russians and Czechs flock to the country’s northern coastal resorts
and islands.
At the same time, thousands of economic migrants, mostly from
Albania, return to their homelands for summer holidays. Greek border
officials
have a duty to facilitate these people’s legal transit by inspecting
their travel documents. Without a doubt, checks must be strict
and thorough as Greece must safeguard its territory against the illegal
movement of people and goods as well as respect its commitments
via
the Schengen treaty.
Meeting our obligations is one thing but denigrating human dignity
is quite another. At some border crossings, the latter has become
near-standard practice. Albanian nationals are kept waiting for days
just because some police officer at passport control “did not like
their face.” Slav-Macedonians are often regarded as “persona non
grata” because, although they have a legal visa, they refuse to declare
that “Macedonia is Greek.” Even the ambassadors of the larger European
states are put through humiliating rituals. Greek embassies in neighboring
countries have received numerous complaints from foreigners who were
mistreated at Greek border posts, but this unacceptable practice
continues, inviting protests from human rights organizations. Worse,
these incidents are reported — and often inflated — in the foreign
media, fanning anti-Greek sentiment. Ordinary citizens care little
if Greece pays compensation to the Chams (ethnic Albanians living
in northwestern Greece) but rightfully object when Greek officials
treat them as second-class citizens.
“Anything built by diplomacy can be destroyed by a police officer
or customs official,” a leading Greek intellectual said.
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* NB: The term "Slav-Macedonians" is a Greek euphemism for
ethnic Macedonians.
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