The Daily - The Sunday Read: ‘They Came to Help Migrants. Now, Europe Has Turned on Them.’
Episode Date: April 3, 2022Exploring the personal experiences of Sara Mardini and Seán Binder, two volunteers who were arrested in February 2018 after helping migrants cross safely into Lesbos, Greece, the journalist Alex W. P...almer outlines the complex situation aid workers in Europe find themselves in: increasingly demonized by local authorities while also facing pressure from different ends of the international political spectrum.Palmer traces the origins of the problem, explaining how, in the early days of the migrant crisis, the grass-roots response embodied the broadly held values of E.U. citizens: to be a place of refuge and compassion, to create a new future from the ashes of two world wars and to set an example based on morality rather than power.But, as Palmer discovers, this idea was never unanimous, and it was only a matter of time before this compassion and idealism was eclipsed by anger and resentment. Many rejected the idea of newcomers entirely. Terrorist attacks and acts of criminality committed by asylum seekers further worsened collective sentiments and heightened public unease about the challenges of integration. The topic became a pawn for far-right media outlets and politicians, who helped stoke the growing anti-immigrant temper, portraying Europe as on the brink of being overrun by foreign hordes — and aid workers as part of the problem.A highly politicized issue, the debate surrounding the migrant crisis continues to rage. As volunteers are targeted, what’s next for migrant aid in Europe?This story was written by Alex W. Palmer and recorded by Audm. To hear more audio stories from publications like The New York Times, download Audm for iPhone or Android.
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Hi, my name is Alex W. Palmer, and I'm a contributor to the New York Times Magazine.
I recently wrote a story about Europe's attempts to stop migration by criminalizing the people
who help migrants.
For the last few decades, there's been a slow but steady trickle of refugees, asylum seekers, and other migrants traveling to Europe, mostly coming from the Middle East and sub-Saharan Africa.
What these migrants and asylum seekers typically did was set out on the Mediterranean, either from Libya or Turkey, with the hopes of reaching Italy or Greece, the border states of the EU.
of reaching Italy or Greece, the border states of the EU.
The total numbers ebbed and flowed, but usually there were, you know, a couple hundred thousand people come into Europe this way every year.
But by 2015, all of a sudden, the numbers grew rapidly to about a million and a half
people, thanks to a whole series of crises around the world, but especially the Syrian
Civil War and the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan.
world, but especially the Syrian civil war and the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan.
And now frontline countries like Italy and Greece, where most of these new arrivals first reached Europe, all of a sudden they're left shouldering a huge portion of that burden.
So, for example, Lesbos, small Greek island, just a couple nautical miles off the coast of Turkey.
In 2015 alone, it sees the arrival of 500,000
migrants and asylum seekers. And just for comparison, the whole island at that time
had a population of about 90,000 people. With this influx came international volunteers who
were inspired to help, who wanted to do their part. So they went to places like Lesbos to try to help the newcomers. This story focuses on two
of those volunteers named Sarah Mardini and Sean Binder. Sarah and Sean were volunteers with ERCI,
a Greek NGO that was founded in early 2016. They were doing this sort of work you would probably expect of early 20s volunteers in a
humanitarian situation. They were handing out blankets on the shoreline, doing some translation
work in the camps, helping administer health and sanitation programs, just helping out however
they could. Now, at this time, Greece is still very much in the grips of the global financial
crisis. Unemployment, especially on Lesbos, was high. Times were tough. But locals really sacrificed what they could to
help the asylum seekers who were arriving. There was a sense of solidarity, of a duty to help.
And the volunteers were needed. This was an overwhelming situation. Their help was appreciated.
But eventually, there was a shift. Locals would think, you know, we're in a tough spot too.
We need help.
Why are these people who are just arriving, coming to our island, why are they getting
all the help?
Why are they getting all the attention?
Why is the NGO industry booming here while, you know, we continue to suffer?
Now, it didn't help that most of the volunteers who came tended to be young, well-educated,
well-off, and they brought their lifestyles, their sort of small luxuries with them, and
it started to open a fissure with the locals.
So even though this situation began with great hope, great compassion, eventually the response
curdled into a kind of angry frustration and a desire to just make it stop
by any means necessary. A few months after Sarah and Sean arrived on Lesbos, they were arrested
for a range of really eye-popping charges. You know, espionage, human trafficking, membership
in a criminal organization, money laundering, charges you would expect a mob boss to be facing, not a couple of
20-something kids. And they could serve 25 years in prison if they're convicted. But it's not just
Sarah and Sean. This is happening across Europe. There have been efforts to prosecute people for
doing what could just be considered simple acts of kindness, like handing out food to people in
the streets, you know, taking someone in who was sleeping outside,
or offering a ride to someone who was walking along the side of the road.
And now people don't know where the line is anymore between charity and crime.
So a lot of volunteers have just stopped doing the work.
A lot of NGOs have just shut down.
Because there's a fear that any action the government doesn't like,
especially working with migrants, could be criminalized.
The crackdown hasn't stopped people from fleeing to Europe when they're seeking safety and opportunity.
But it has caused death and misery for those people.
It's the migrants themselves, and it's those who would offer them help, like Sarah and Sean, who end up paying the price.
So, here's my article, read by Robert Petkoff. The Turning Tide, published in the New York Times Magazine, written by Alex W. Palmer. On a cold night in February 2018,
On a cold night in February 2018,
Sarah Mardini and Sean Binder sat in a Jeep on the rocky headlands of Lesbos,
their eyes on the water.
As volunteers for Emergency Response Center International,
a small humanitarian aid group,
Mardini and Binder were looking for signs of incoming migrant boats so they could alert the Greek coast guard and search and rescue groups to dispatch assistance.
They made an unlikely pair.
Binder is a soft-spoken Irishman with broad shoulders and a moth of black hair.
Mardini, a Syrian refugee with a nose ring and a preference for leather jackets.
But they shared an easy camaraderie,
bound by their playful energy and a fiercely serious devotion to their work.
Just a few years earlier, Lesbos, a Greek island off the coast of Turkey, became the center of the European migrant crisis,
serving as the point of landfall for more than 500,000 of the approximately 1 million asylum seekers who reached Europe by sea in 2015.
one million asylum seekers who reached Europe by sea in 2015.
Now, even as the world's attention had moved on, the crisis on Lesbos remained.
Migrants continued to arrive, although in smaller numbers.
Most came expecting to pass through, but instead, they often found themselves stuck for months or years, a result of closed borders, tightened migration policies, and a creaking
system for processing asylum claims.
An island once known for its unspoiled beaches and local ouzo was now something closer to
a holding center.
Around 3 a.m., a police car pulled up next to the jeep.
An impromptu visit like this was not unusual.
As the overwhelming chaos of the crisis's early months had settled into a more stable kind of misery,
volunteers noticed that the local police had taken the opportunity to reassert their authority,
making frequent unannounced check-ins.
Someone had already warned Binder and Mardini that the police were visiting all the organizations on the island that day.
After checking their IDs, Mardini and Binder say,
one of the police officers walked around to the back of the ERCI jeep
and told them that the rear license plate was askew.
He pulled it off, revealing a military license plate underneath.
Mardini and Binder were baffled.
The vehicle had been purchased from a used car dealership.
They had no idea where the plates came from.
A second car of police and Coast Guard officers arrived to confer,
and the two volunteers were asked to drive back to the port
accompanied by two officers.
When they reached the Coast Guard station,
Binder and Mardini were put under arrest.
We thought it was a joke, Binder said. They didn't know anything about the plates,
nor was it apparent how a hidden plate was supposed to help the jeep pass as a military
vehicle. It was painted silver and decorated with huge ERCI logos. That morning, Binder and Mardini
were fingerprinted and lined up for mugshots.
They were made to sign documents in Greek that they didn't understand and then put in a cell
together. A few hours later, Binder led the police to the ERCI house and warehouse where
officers rifled through boxes, found nothing, and returned to the station. Soon after that,
the police released them and informed them that they had opened an investigation. A friend sent Binder an article on a
conservative Greek website describing in lurid detail a foiled scheme concocted by a German spy,
Binder, apparently, and his Syrian accomplice to gather intelligence on the Greek navy.
and his Syrian accomplice to gather intelligence on the Greek Navy.
It all seemed absurd.
Binder took a screenshot of the article and sent it to his mother back in Ireland.
For six months, life continued as usual.
Then, the morning that Mardini was scheduled to travel to Germany,
Binder received a call from a mutual friend who sounded agitated.
She explained that Mardini had been taken in again to the police station
and that the police wanted to talk to Binder too.
When Binder arrived at the station,
he found Mardini in an upstairs room
seated across from a police officer typing on a computer.
Binder asked what was going on,
but the man just grunted.
After a few hours of waiting,
Binder got up and said he was going to leave.
The officer stopped typing and looked up from his computer.
Sit down, he said.
You're not going anywhere.
Around midday, a lawyer arrived to represent the two volunteers.
He said that they would be taken to the prosecutor's office
in the local courthouse to answer a few questions.
Binder and Mardini were told to put out their arms and an officer handcuffed them together
for the trip to the courthouse. For Binder, his first reaction was not fear or anger,
but a sense of betrayal and disbelief.
I worked with the people who arrested me, he said. I called them in emergencies. They asked us for help.
We shared resources with them.
And now, he was in their custody.
At the courthouse, Binder and Mardini came to understand
the true scope of their situation.
The odd incident with the military plate had been transformed
into the starting point for far more serious allegations.
According to the narrative presented by prosecutors and the police, Binder and Mardini were not
humanitarians at all, but members of a sprawling criminal cabal responsible for trafficking
droves of migrants into Greece.
While more than three dozen volunteers from a number of non-governmental
organizations were implicated, the crux of the investigation focused on Binder, Mardini,
two ERCI staff members named Athanasios Karakitsos and Mirella Alexou, and ERCI's founder Panos
Moritis. The charges included espionage, forgery, and the illegal use of radio frequencies.
They would grow to include trafficking, fraud, money laundering, and being part of a criminal organization.
For their work saving lives on the shores of Lesbos,
the humanitarians each faced up to a quarter century in prison.
quarter-century in prison. It has been nearly three years since the European Union's top migration official, Dimitris Abamopoulos, declared an end to the continent's migration emergency.
The times of crisis, when hundreds of thousands were coming by sea to Italy and Greece,
are behind us, he said, noting that migration into the EU had
declined to levels not seen since 2013. But these assurances belied a far messier truth.
It would be more accurate to say that Europe's migration crisis has become permanent,
an unending nightmare of squalid camps, squandered hopes, and festering animosity.
nightmare of squalid camps, squandered hopes, and festering animosity. Caught between its self-conception as an area of freedom, security, and justice, and its delicate political reality,
the EU has landed on a grim stalemate in which frontline states like Greece and Italy
are made to bear the burden of a whole continent, and the burden of those seeking to make it their home.
In the early days of the crisis,
the grassroots response was the very image
of what many EU citizens believed their bloc to be,
a place of refuge and compassion
created from the ashes of two world wars
to set an example based on morality rather than power.
In every major city in Europe,
volunteers mobilized to offer food,
shelter, and other assistance to the new arrivals.
But the goodwill was never unanimous,
and it did not take long for the compassion
and idealism of the initial response
to curdle into anger and resentment.
Some people simply never wanted the newcomers at all.
Several terrorist attacks and other acts of criminality by asylum seekers
soured the mood further,
heightening public unease about the challenges of integration.
Far-right politicians and media outlets
stoked and sharpened the growing anti-immigrant temper,
portraying Europe as on the brink of being overrun by foreign hordes.
In Poland, the head of the Law and Justice Party
said on the campaign trail in 2015
that immigrants were bringing cholera to the Greek islands,
dysentery to Vienna, various types of parasites.
The party scored a decisive victory that year,
becoming the first to secure an absolute majority
in the country's parliament since the fall of communism in 1989. In Austria, the People's
Party won the chancellorship on the back of an explicitly anti-immigrant platform in a campaign
so vitriolic that the United Nations Refugee Agency noted its concern over the xenophobic tenor of the debates.
Liberal and centrist parties, fearful of being swept from power,
adopted rhetoric and policies once seen only on the far right.
By 2021, even Sweden's Social Democrats, who had once championed some of the EU's
most generous asylum policies, were disowning their former positions.
Let's be very clear about one thing. We're never going back to 2015, Prime Minister Stefan Löfven
told the Swedish Daily. Sweden will not end up there again. And yet two years into the pandemic,
despite border closures and restrictions on new arrivals, people continue
to seek safety and opportunity in Europe. Almost 125,000 migrants and asylum seekers
reached Europe via the Mediterranean in 2021. Far from an aberration, the turmoil of 2015
was only an amplification of trends long underway, as conflict, climate change and globalization
drive migration from the global south to richer countries.
Europe is not immune to internal turmoil either.
The war in Ukraine could send tens of thousands
fleeing for safety into the EU.
The EU, meanwhile, has quietly adopted
a much harsher line on migration and asylum.
The bloc has erected new barriers, both physical and legal, to keep out would-be newcomers,
including a substantial expansion and empowerment of Frontex, the EU's border protection agency.
Brussels has also made efforts to externalize the bloc's borders
through dubious partnerships in states that migrants pass through.
Libyan militias, for example, have been funded and trained to act as Europe's first line of defense.
As a result, while overall arrivals remain down from their 2015 peak,
the death rate for migrants trying to reach Europe has been steadily increasing since 2019.
Today, the Mediterranean is by far the world's deadliest border.
One of the most striking facets of the EU's shifting attitude toward migration
is a decentralized but pronounced reaction against NGOs, which once acted as a buffer
to soften the worst excesses of the system.
National and local governments have moved beyond restrictions on migrants themselves
to take aim at the helpers. Why target humanitarians, Jennifer Alsop, a migration
researcher at the University of Birmingham says? Because it works. They've already done
everything possible to criminalize migrants.
The crackdown has been an indisputable success, if not in numbers, then in terms of misery inflicted.
The EU relies on charities to fill gaps in social services, Alsop says.
If you take that away, you make conditions intolerable.
If you take that away, you make conditions intolerable.
Greece's prosecution of Binder, Mardini, and the other members of ERCI is only the most dramatic example.
Across Europe, NGOs and volunteers have faced suspicion, harassment, and prosecution for even simple acts of charity like distributing food or offering shelter. Once cheered for their work,
many are now condemned and vilified, and sometimes, as in the case of Binder,
Mardini, and others in ERCI, face decades in prison. The stifling of the NGOs and the loss
of public attention have enabled a new level of cruelty against migrants. In February, 12 migrants froze to death near the
Greek-Turkish border, reportedly after Greek border guards stripped the migrants of their
clothes and shoes and forced them back toward Turkey. Greece's migration minister denied the
claims. Thousands of migrants, meanwhile, disappear into a network of secretive detention centers run by the EU's Libyan partners.
Those caught inside Libya's lucrative smuggling trade are often kept in giant warehouses, treated as goods waiting to be moved.
Though access by media and human rights organizations is sparse, there have been accounts of torture, rape, and murder,
is sparse, there have been accounts of torture, rape, and murder, as well as evidence, first reported by CNN in 2017, of migrants being sold as slaves at open-air auctions. Doctors Without
Borders, the international humanitarian NGO, reported in 2018 that it sent 50 body bags per
week to just one camp. Almost seven years on from the outset of the migrant crisis,
these anecdotes have largely lost their power to shock,
in part because there is rarely anyone there to see them
and little public appetite to hear about them.
It is a significant fall from the hope and engagement of 2015
when the wave of volunteers who flocked to Lesbos
were celebrated as embodiments of the very best of the EU. But on Lesbos, as with the entire
experience of the migrant crisis, the turn from gratitude to hostility was especially swift and
intense. One night in early April 2015,
the head of the local Coast Guard station called Spiros Galinos,
the mayor of Lesbos, to ask for an emergency meeting.
At that point, the island was receiving an average of about 300 new migrants every day,
mostly from Syria, Afghanistan and Iraq.
The growing crisis had quickly become Galenos' main priority in office.
In their late-night meeting, the head of the Coast Guard unit said that his men were overwhelmed
and in desperate need of help.
Forced to press on much longer, they would simply break.
Galenos was in his mid-60s with bushy eyebrows, a prominent widow's peak, and a perpetually amused expression.
He had served as a city councilman for almost two decades, and he prized pragmatism above ideology.
someone from Athens, Brussels, the UN, somewhere, would arrive to take control of the situation,
which was well beyond the responsibility or capacity of a local government.
But on that night in April, the reality of the situation dawned on him.
No one else was coming, he thought. Lesbos was on its own.
The summer made for surreal scenes and jarring contradictions.
Though the crisis had clearly arrived, it had not yet caught the world's attention.
The island continued to operate as the tranquil Mediterranean getaway it had always been.
While British retirees sipped coffee beneath the awnings of portside cafes, hundreds or even thousands of migrants trudged past,
seeking food, shelter, or the next ferry to the mainland.
By October, several thousand asylum seekers were arriving each day.
Though most continued to use the island only as a transit point,
enough remained temporarily, willingly or not,
that it seemed to Galenos as if there were,
at times, more people living on the streets of Mytilene than there were Greek residents of the
city. Migrants were camped out in every available space, including the steps of the mayor's office.
Local residents saw their gardens turned into impromptu toilets by migrants with nowhere else to go.
You can only imagine what was happening here, Galenos told me.
Imagine the sea full of dinghies, full of people, 6,000, 7,000 arriving every day.
Lesbos had yet to receive any financial support from the EU.
Funds for the crisis response were coming entirely from the municipality's own budget.
The national government in Athens, for its part,
faced calls from other EU governments to set up refugee camps
for roughly 300,000 people or risk having its borders sealed off from the rest of Europe.
Lesbos, meanwhile, continued to be overwhelmed. All he could do,
Galinos told me, was scream for help. Humanitarians were the first to respond.
Global media coverage of the disaster, especially the photo of Alan Kurdi, the three-year-old Syrian
boy whose lifeless body was found on a Turkish beach, brought thousands of
volunteers from all over the world. They filled the ranks of dozens of small-scale NGOs, many of
which were created specifically to address the crisis on Lesbos. While a few large organizations
like the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, UNHCR, and the International Rescue Committee took the lead,
it was the smaller NGOs that made up the bulk of the humanitarian community.
By one count, there were about 120 NGOs on Lesbos at the height of the crisis,
taking the lead in everything from search and rescue to legal services. Among them was ERCI, which was founded in late 2015 by Maritis,
a maritime executive.
At the time, his wife was pregnant with their first child
and the endless images of drowned migrants turned his stomach.
I just wanted to help, he said.
I didn't want to see people drowning in my country's waters.
From two full-time volunteers,
the organization grew to a handful of staff members and several dozen more volunteers, waxing and waning in size as people came and went.
The presence of so many foreigners, however indispensable their work, generated tension on
the island. Using volunteers created this gap, which always happens on the front lines if
nationals aren't involved, this gap of us and you, Farshad Shamgoly, an aid worker who spent
several years on Lesbos, says. The volunteers were often well-educated, with a strong sense
of themselves as global citizens and a concern for the rights of the dispossessed. These were the traits
that drove the volunteers
to serve,
but they could also
cause friction
with local residents.
Money became a source
of especially fierce contention.
Who had it and why?
Lesbos,
like the rest of Greece,
remained mired
in the effects
of the global financial crisis
and resulting austerity measures, and unemployment was high.
It was difficult for the citizens of the island,
who gave the migrants everything they could spare for years on end,
to watch the NGO industry boom.
When the NGOs came, people thought,
we're doing the same thing as them, but they're getting money for it,
Vasilis Asbestopoulos, a Greek-German photojournalist who has covered migration since 2008, said.
Aid workers and volunteers generally brought their standard of living with them to the island,
renting cars and enjoying small luxuries that set them apart.
They had everything the Greeks didn't, Asbestopoulos said.
They had everything the Greeks didn't, Oswestopoulos said.
Rumors swirled about where all the money was coming from and the true motives of the humanitarians.
Greek television fanned the flames by publicizing the salaries of aid workers.
A vast majority of the volunteers performed admirably,
even if they stayed for just a short while.
But on a small island, it took only a handful of exceptions to poison local trust.
It's like policemen, Asbestopolis said.
You can have 100 bad policemen and 100 good ones.
No one will remember the good ones.
He said he once heard about a scene at a small market on the island
where a group of young volunteers filled up several carrier bags with items,
then took a selfie, posted it to Facebook to ask for donations for refugees,
and finally left without buying anything or even putting the items back.
This is what you hear in the coffee shops, Asbestopolis said.
coffee shops, Asbestopoulos said. NGOs were caught in a wrenching dynamic. The more they were needed,
the more they were resented. The more they helped, the more they were seen as the problem.
Without the NGOs, we couldn't manage it, Ioannis Mousalis, who served as Greece's migration minister from 2015 to 2018, said.
Yet, they were helpful in a way that usually insulted the country and the people.
In that fissure, opponents of the refugees and the NGOs found ample room for attack.
Among those who arrived on Lesbos in 2015 were Sarah Mardini and her younger sister Yusra.
They had a comfortable upbringing in the Damascus suburb Dariya,
daughters of a physiotherapist mother and a swim coach father.
The civil war came to their door in 2012 when a battle between rebels and government forces left their neighborhood in ruins. The teenage sisters
eventually received permission from their parents to flee to Europe with two male relatives.
They traveled to Lebanon and then to Turkey where they paid a smuggler to help them reach Greece.
On their first try, the Turkish Coast Guard interrupted their departure.
On their second try in August 2015, the engine stalled and the vessel,
an inflatable dinghy crammed with 20 people, began taking on water.
Sarah and Yusra were both high-level competitive swimmers.
They and other passengers jumped into the sea,
swimming for most of the three-and-a- a half hour trip to keep the craft afloat as the engine cut in and out.
When they finally came ashore on Lesbos, it was late at night. With their phone dead,
all they knew was where they were, a beach with small rocks flanked on one side by a large cliff.
Directly ahead, they saw lights from a restaurant
and the group began walking toward it.
When they asked the owner for food, he refused.
They offered 50 euros, but he still refused.
It was their first memory of Europe.
At sea and on land, the sisters' chilly reception
was one consequence of a turn already underway in EU migration policy.
In April 2015, the EU, wary of the rising number of migrant arrivals and the deaths at sea that accompanied them, began a War on Smugglers.
One aspect of the new initiative, Operation Sophia, involved deploying military vessels to capture and destroy the boats used by migrant smugglers.
By its stated metric, the policy was a clear success.
In just over two years, the operation captured and sank more than 400 boats.
Yet the policy had a perverse effect.
With their larger, more seaworthy wooden boats being destroyed,
human smugglers shifted to using cheaper, more dangerous rubber dinghies.
NGOs found themselves caught in the middle,
trying to save lives amid an escalating battle
between human smugglers and EU border control.
The consequences were especially clear in the central Mediterranean, in the waters between
Libya and Italy. As the risk of capsizings grew, search and rescue NGOs responded by deploying
more boats closer to Libyan waters, sometimes at the direction of the Italian coast guard.
The NGOs saved lives. When they were out at sea, the migrant mortality rate declined noticeably.
When they withdrew, as they did during the winter season, the mortality rate surged. But at the same
time, their existence may have helped reinforce the dangerous shifts already underway in the
smuggling industry. With rescue vessels moving closer to Libyan waters, smugglers put their human cargo in ever more perilous crafts, on the assumption that help was only a short distance away.
By 2017, NGOs were assisting in more than 40% of rescues in the Mediterranean, a sharp increase from three years earlier when NGOs were involved in 1% of rescues.
from three years earlier when NGOs were involved in 1% of rescues.
The expanding role of NGOs fed a perception that they were acting as a pull factor,
that by rescuing migrants at sea,
NGOs only encouraged more and riskier journeys,
thereby actually increasing deaths.
More fringe observers accused NGOs of secretly conspiring with smugglers to bring migrants into Europe. The most extreme version of the pull-factor narrative found a
home and a ready promoter in a constellation of far-right blogs pushing the conspiracy theory
that European leaders were undertaking a great replacement of the continent's population.
Among the most active and vocal of these outlets was Gifira. On December 4, 2016,
Gifira published an article titled, NGOs are smuggling immigrants into Europe on an industrial
scale, claiming that NGOs were involved in a The article ricocheted around other right-wing sites,
but its arguments had a limited audience.
Eleven days later, the allegations went mainstream
when an article in the Financial Times reported that NGOs were supposedly
colluding with smugglers.
Citing confidential reports from Frontex,
the article described the agency's belief that migrants were being given
clear indications before departure on the precise direction to be followed
in order to reach the NGOs' boats,
including at least one case when
criminal networks were smuggling migrants directly on an NGO vessel.
The Financial Times soon issued a partial retraction,
walking back the most incendiary claims and admitting that it had overstated the accusations.
Still, Frontex's official report, issued two months later,
stated that NGOs were unintentionally
helping smugglers and thereby increasing the flow of migrants.
In January 2016, just as the first volunteers from ERCI arrived on Lesbos,
the Greek government announced that all NGOs operating on the island
would henceforth be required to register their activities with the authorities,
as well as provide the names and photos of every member of their organization.
The policy's aim, according to the government,
was the continuous coordination and control of their
actions. NGOs immediately reported an increase in police checks, verbal harassment, and arbitrary
searches. The same month the registry was introduced, the Coast Guard on Lesbos arrested
five search and rescue volunteers, including three Spanish firefighters, after the men responded
to a distress call from a migrant ship at sea.
They were charged with aiding illegal migration and faced up to 10 years in prison.
In the months that followed, Lesbos became a laboratory for other restrictive policies,
like the automatic detention of unaccompanied male migrants from certain countries.
The tightening atmosphere on Lesbos signaled the escalation of a crackdown
that was already well underway across the continent.
In Denmark, hundreds of people were fined
after they offered rides to migrants walking along roadways.
In Italy, volunteers were arrested for violating a ban on distributing food to
migrants. In Hungary, new laws made it a crime simply to inform migrants of their right to seek
asylum. Even as new arrivals declined significantly from their 2015 peak, restrictions on how, where, and whom NGOs could help proliferated.
It was precisely injustices like these that had led Sean Binder to Lesbos in the first place.
There doesn't need to be a dramatic moment when you realize people drowning in the sea is unfair,
he said. You don't need an awakening. It's just unfair.
He'd spent most of his life as an outsider,
the son of a German mother and a Vietnamese refugee father in a rural corner of Ireland.
The experience had instilled in him a deep-rooted sense of right and wrong.
After college, he completed a graduate degree in international relations
at the London School of Economics and Political Science
with a focus on European security and defense policy. degree in international relations at the London School of Economics and Political Science,
with a focus on European security and defense policy. As the migrant crisis unfolded,
he felt that he had a responsibility to help. He joined ERCI in October 2017 as a search and rescue diver and an aid worker in Caratapé, a smaller camp set aside for especially vulnerable groups like unaccompanied
children. He met Mardini, who had settled in Berlin but decided to return to Lesbos as a
volunteer with ERCI. When I am afraid of something, I go do it, she said. That's how I get over it.
They became fast friends. Binder and Mardini stayed on as the situation on the island started to deteriorate.
The notorious Moria refugee camp, where they volunteered in an ERCI medical clinic,
ballooned to a population of more than 6,000 people, double its capacity.
Migrants who expected to reach Lesbos and continue on to other parts of Europe
found themselves stuck on the island as the overburdened Greek asylum system
struggled to handle the enormous number of applications it received.
In 2016, the EU cut a deal with Ankara.
In exchange for billions in aid and other incentives,
Turkey would work to prevent migrants from leaving its shores
and also accept the return
of migrants who did manage to reach Greece. The agreement succeeded in slowing migration,
but it further snarled Greece's asylum system. The frustration of the asylum seekers boiled
over into protests and riots, both in the camps and in downtown Mytilene.
and riots, both in the camps and in downtown Mytilene. Weary local residents likewise
took to the streets, aiming their animus at the NGOs and asylum
seekers, but also at the Greek government. The migrants and the
camps came to characterize the island, decimating the tourism
industry on which the local economy had relied.
In November 2017, Galenos himself called for a
general strike and a day of protests in hopes of forcing Athens to act. The central government
eventually heeded the call, but it did so with one ear tuned to right-wing media, which saw NGOs
as the very source of the crisis. In mid-2019, a new center-right party took power in Greece
with a campaign pledge to restore law and order, especially on migration.
While the NGO registry first pioneered on Lesbos had been implemented nationwide in 2018,
the new government tightened and updated the requirement to specifically target NGOs working in the areas of asylum migration and social integration.
Three further expansions of the registration law followed over the next 12 months.
The government's hardline approach was enabled and exacerbated
by the changing makeup of the migrant flow.
At the height of the crisis in 2015 and early 2016,
the plurality of new arrivals came from Syria.
As victims of a brutal civil war,
they had a clear case for asylum under international law.
Over the next several years,
the number of Syrians declined to a tiny fraction of the 2015 peak,
while the number of irregular migrants
from North and Sub-Saharan Africa gradually came to predominate. Some sought refugee status,
but many others came seeking work and opportunity, aspirations that didn't fit the criteria for
international protection. Perhaps more important, they received nothing like the outpouring of
sympathy that had initially greeted Syrian asylum seekers. Individuals fleeing Afghanistan
fared little better. The most concerted anti-migrant push was in Italy, where in June 2018,
Matteo Salvini was sworn in as Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of the Interior.
Salvini ran on a promise to halt illegal migration,
which he described as an attempt at
replacing the Italian people with other people.
He enthusiastically embraced the idea that NGOs were a pull factor
attracting migrants to Europe's shores,
and he vowed to deport hundreds of thousands
of migrants who had already arrived. The good times for illegals are over, he said.
Get ready to pack your bags. A few days after taking power, he declared that Italian ports
would henceforth be closed to NGO boats carrying migrants rescued at sea. Those that tried to conduct their work
nonetheless were impounded and their crews placed under investigation. A few months later, Salvini
pushed through a decree that eliminated a provision for two-year residency permits previously offered
on humanitarian protection grounds, while also cutting integration services.
As on Lesbos, the new policies stemmed from legitimate frustrations.
Between September 2015 and April 2018, almost 350,000 migrants reached Italy.
The emergency relocation plan proposed by the EU offered help resettling only 35,000 of them. In reality, between September 2015 and September 2018, other European countries accepted fewer than
13,000 asylum seekers from Italy, just 4% of the total. Yet the crackdown did not solve the
problem. Salvini's policies only drove more migrants underground,
into the grey economy and away from government aid and social services.
By the time Salvini resigned in September 2019,
Italy had, by one estimate, 650,000 irregular migrants
compared with the 500,000 counted under his predecessor.
The handcuffing of NGOs likewise did little to halt migration.
As the controversy over a pull factor swelled,
Mateo Vila and Eugenio Cusumano, researchers who study migration,
set out to measure empirically the relationship between the presence of NGO rescue ships and migrant crossings.
Using data from 2014 onward, Vila and Cusimano found no link
between the deployment of NGO ships off the Libyan coast and attempted crossings.
In fact, on average, more migrants attempted the journey on days when there were no NGO boats in the nearby sea.
Findings from the western Mediterranean only drove home the point.
Between 2015 and 2016, sea crossings from Morocco to Spain increased by nearly 50%,
though there were no NGO vessels anywhere in the area.
No one looks at the data, Vila said.
We have eight years' worth of monthly data and daily data for three years,
and none of it supports the idea that NGOs increase arrivals.
The most important variables were more quotidian.
Air temperature, wind, and the roughness of the sea.
When the water was calmer, more people risked the journey.
The only thing that changed when NGOs were absent, they found, was the fatality rate.
As Mardini and Binder sat in their jail cells awaiting trial, the case against ERCI came into clearer view.
After many months of in-depth investigation, the police said in a statement,
they had determined that at least six Greeks and 24 foreigners were involved in
an organized criminal network that systematically facilitated the illegal entry of foreigners
under the guise of humanitarian aid.
They released an 86-page report that detailed the allegations
and that would form the
basis of the prosecution.
The case was built
on a series of overlapping charges,
each one linking into the next.
There was the spectacular
charge of espionage.
To support this claim, the Lesbos
police said that ERCI
had listened to radio chatter from Frontex and the Coast Guard,
while also concealing their own illicit exchanges of confidential information by using encrypted social networking and communication tools.
ERCI accepted donations, which added a money laundering charge.
Facilitating the illegal entry of foreigners
was a violation of the state's migration code. And the ERCI jeep with the false military plates
constituted forgery. Together, these offenses made ERCI a criminal organization.
In a November 2018 report, Human Rights Watch rebuffed these claims,
noting that the report issued by the Lesbos police said explicitly that the radio channels were, in fact,
open to anyone with a VHF radio, a standard piece of equipment on any ship.
These same radio channels, moreover, were used by the Coast Guard to communicate with ERCI and other
non-profit rescue groups. The close partnership between ERCI and the Coast Guard was not in
dispute. Soon after Binder and Mardini were arrested, the deputy head of the Coast Guard
in Middle Eny confirmed under oath that ERCI members regularly alerted him to incoming boats.
under oath that ERCI members regularly alerted him to incoming boats.
The encrypted messaging service that ERCI volunteers had supposedly used to mask their correspondence was simply a WhatsApp thread
shared by a number of humanitarian actors on the island.
There were even more basic problems with the evidence,
the Human Rights Watch report said.
Of the 11 instances when Binder
and Mardini supposedly engaged in human smuggling, occasions when ERCI helped rescue migrants in
distress at sea, Binder was in Britain on at least six of those occasions. Five occurred before he
even joined ERCI. Mardini, too, was out of the country on six of the stated dates.
The money laundering charge leveled against Mardini
was pinned to a single piece of evidence,
Facebook messages in which Mardini wrote of her work with ERCI,
I am a long-time volunteer and I help with fundraising.
Beyond the shortcomings of the evidence,
the case seemed to contradict clear provisions of Greek law. The felony accusations claimed that
ERCI's work constituted human trafficking, yet the law that Binder and Mardini were accused of
violating expressly excludes helping asylum seekers. The Human Rights Watch report noted that the police paradoxically referred to the people ERCI rescued as refugees,
while at the same time describing efforts to help them as trafficking,
a crime that involves force, fraud, or coercion.
And despite the sensational claim of espionage,
there was no assertion of whom Binder and Mardini were supposedly spying for.
Bill Van Esveld, an associate director in the Children's Rights Division at Human Rights Watch and the author of the report,
told me that he was appalled by what he found when he combed through the evidence and allegations.
You don't have to dig very far
before it starts to look really, really abusive, he said.
The sloppiness of the evidence against them,
that indicates that an effort to ascertain the facts
was second to something else.
He suspected that the indictment was meant as a warning
to anyone who might help migrants,
refugees and asylum seekers on Lesbos or elsewhere in Greece.
This is about a bigger objective, Van Esvelde said.
Absolutely destroy the NGOs and sow the ground with salt.
While lawyers combed through the documents,
Binder and Mardini remained in pretrial detention,
in Binder's case, alongside
murder suspects and arms traffickers.
Greek law
allows up to 18 months
of pretrial detention,
and Binder tried to brace himself for the
possibility that they would serve the entire
term.
In early December, the court granted
their petition for pretrial release.
Altogether, they had been
held for 106 days. A few months after their release, Binder and Mardini met in Berlin.
A local human rights organization called Borderline Europe was organizing a panel event
on the growing crackdown, and Binder and Mardini were invited to speak.
Alongside the panel, Borderline Europe had scheduled an informal meeting,
part coordination event, part group therapy session,
where embattled humanitarians from across Europe
could meet to discuss their situations and plan strategy,
a human testament to the fact that what began on Lesbos
had metastasized across the
continent. Borderline Europe took a special interest in these cases. Two of the organization's
founders, Stefan Schmidt and Elias Beerdl, were arrested by Italian authorities in 2004
and charged with immigration crimes after their rescue ship, the Cap-en-Amour, docked in Sicily with 37 rescued migrants aboard.
Though Schmidt and Beerdl were ultimately acquitted,
the ordeal dragged on for five years.
All but one of the 37 migrants were eventually deported.
The meeting was held in a small sunlit conference room in southern Berlin.
In the corner of the room was
a blue poster with the words, Universal Declaration of Human Rights, written across a small coffin.
Carmine Conte, a soft-spoken Italian migration policy researcher at the Migration Policy Group,
began by presenting a draft report on the extent of the crackdown. By his count, there had been at least 49 cases initiated since 2015,
affecting 158 individuals in 11 EU member states.
Despite the sharp drop in migrant arrivals, down 90% by 2018,
the rate of prosecutions continued to increase.
These are just the ones we know about, Conte said.
A few weeks after the meeting, the website Open Democracy announced that it had identified more
than 250 people across 14 countries who have been arrested, charged, or investigated for a variety
of supposed crimes supporting migrants. At least 100 of these
incidents took place in 2018
alone, the website noted,
double the total from the previous
year. The full
figures are likely much higher,
the group concluded.
Lower-level harassment and
intimidation against aid workers was
so common, meanwhile, that it was
nearly impossible to
quantify. After Conte finished giving his report, the room went quiet.
I'm one of these criminals, Sasha Girka said from near the head of the table with a sly smile.
The rest of the room let out a laugh. Girka was forty, with close-cropped hair,
out a laugh. Gierke was 40, with close-cropped hair, graying stubble, and playful eyes. He had been head of mission on the Juventa, a search and rescue ship when it was seized by Italian
authorities in 2017 on charges of aiding illegal migration. He and nine other crew members were
investigated. Eventually, four were charged and they each faced up to 20 years in prison.
Their case was well known to everyone in the room.
The seizure of the Juventa came soon after the Italian government introduced a
Code of Conduct for all NGOs disembarking at the country's ports.
The new rules included a ban on NGOs entering Libyan waters unless human life was clearly in danger,
as well as a ban on firing flares. Perhaps most controversial was a provision requiring NGOs to
let the Italian police travel on board with them, ostensibly to help identify and arrest any human
traffickers traveling among the rescued migrants. Along with four other organizations, the Juventa crew refused to sign on.
On August 2, 2017, two days after the deadline passed,
Italian authorities seized the ship and later accused the crew
of colluding with human smugglers on three separate occasions in 2016 and 2017.
The crew denies the charges.
The case was a sensation in the right-wing media
where insinuations about NGO-led smuggling were rampant.
In the summer of 2017,
right-wing influencers went so far
as to charter a ship of their own
with the goal of disrupting NGO rescues
and proving that the aid workers were merely
criminals operating under the cloak of humanitarianism.
A few seats away from Gierke was Anouk van Gestel, then the editor of the Belgian edition
of Marie Claire magazine.
In October 2017, the police searched van Gestel's apartment and confiscated her electronic devices.
Along with hundreds of other Belgian citizens,
she had opened her home to migrants and asylum seekers
who were sleeping in Maximilian Park in Brussels.
When the police conducted their search,
she was hosting an unaccompanied Sudanese child.
She was subsequently accused of human smuggling
as well as participation in an organized criminal
group. Though she and three other Belgian citizens were acquitted, the prosecution quickly filed an
appeal. The trial has already cost one million euros, she told the group. Isn't this a waste of
time and money? For the accused humanitarians gathered around the table, the costs were already staggering.
The average duration of the cases is two years, but sometimes cases last even four or five years, Conte told me later by email.
Years of investigation, prosecution, and the media spotlight exact a financial, emotional, and reputational toll.
spotlights exact a financial, emotional, and reputational toll.
Some young volunteers are unable to find a job after being criminalized,
and they have to sustain heavy financial expenses for their trials, Conte said.
The constant sense of uncertainty and the looming possibility of a prison sentence,
in addition to the jail time often served while awaiting release on bail, can also be agonizing.
Even if they are acquitted, their lives have been shattered. As the meeting wound down,
Gierke tried to buoy spirits by reminding the others that they were not alone.
We are all partners in crime, he said. Don't be afraid. Go on with the work.
Their role, Gierke said, was to prod the conscience of Europe to make the continent live up to the values of freedom and justice that it espoused. On migration,
the gap between ideals and reality seemed particularly vast. They would be the ones
standing in the middle. We will always end up in an antagonistic position with the state
because we want to change it, he said. We want to change the world.
More than four years after their initial arrest, Binder, Mardini, and their colleagues remained
caught in judicial limbo. At first, Binder expected the case to move quickly. The accusations were extraordinary and the evidence threadbare.
It was only a matter of time until the charges were dropped, he thought,
or he and his fellow volunteers were acquitted.
But months came and went, and then years.
The Greek police were continuing to investigate and gather evidence,
and the prosecutor was evaluating the case.
That was all Binder heard. While Binder waited, he watched from afar as the humanitarian community
on Lesbos withered, and the island itself slid toward chaos. The dismantling of ERCI had changed
the mood. Far-right groups seemed empowered. Two weeks after Binder and
Mardini were taken into custody, Vandals destroyed a monument to drowned migrants that had been built
in a small harbor outside Mittolini. Vandals had defaced the monument the previous year,
but this time they demolished it down to its concrete base. Many of ERCI's remaining volunteers departed the island
as quickly as they could, sometimes without telling anyone they were leaving. Other NGOs
involved in search and rescue also shut down their operations. Everyone freaked out, especially doing
search and rescue, Fabiana de Lima Faria, a former ERCI volunteer who worked on Lesbos for several
years, said. Everyone thought they would be next. When rescue boats came to port, local residents
gathered to harass them. In ERCI's old area of operations on the south of the island, there had
once been at least four humanitarian organizations with rescue vessels at any given time. Within a few months of the arrests, there were none. Migrants continued
to hazard the journey. In 2019, Lesbos had more new arrivals in a 12-month period than it had in
the previous two years combined. The consequences of the NGO withdrawal were clear and immediate.
In March 2019, local media reported that the Greek Coast Guard recovered the body of a girl
on a southern beach. The child, who was believed to have drowned in a shipwreck off the coast of
the island the previous month, was nine. Her body was found without a head.
previous month, was nine. Her body was found without a head. As elsewhere in Europe, the proportion of Afghan and African migrants increased, adding fuel to the narrative that Lesbos was now
an established route for economic migration into Europe. With borders closed and the asylum and
resettlement system ground almost entirely to a halt, the camps on
the island swelled once again. From approximately 5,000 residents in July 2019, Moria had upward of
20,000 people by the beginning of 2020. The more overcrowded the camps became, the more resistance
arose from migrants and local residents alike. Then, the government in Athens announced
that it would begin construction on new facilities for migrants
on several of the Aegean islands, including Lesbos,
the least desirable outcome for everyone involved.
When the construction equipment for the new facilities arrived in port,
local residents formed a blockade to stop it from reaching the building site.
The government delayed its plans for Lesbos.
International politics provided the last nudge
to push the island over the brink.
In February 2020,
after four years of cooperation with EU authorities,
Turkey announced that it would no longer
prevent migrants from leaving its
territory and heading toward Europe. By one estimate, more than 150,000 people gathered
on Turkey's western coast, aiming to reach the nearby Greek islands. Apparently hoping to stem
the flow, the Greek government suspended the filing of all asylum claims for one month,
a move with no legal basis.
Athens said it would ask the EU for a special dispensation.
Lesbos descended into something like a war zone,
with clashes in the streets between far-right and far-left groups.
Journalists and humanitarian volunteers were beaten,
their car windows were smashed.
Menacing roadblocks sprang up on some of the island's main roads. Migrants, as always,
paid the heaviest price, in the camps and on the shores. When a migrant boat came into port,
local residents flocked to the landing, cursing at the passengers to leave.
Even more radicalized groups gathered to stalk the island at night,
and volunteers evacuated in panic.
It's victims fighting among each other,
Louis Pilot, a humanitarian aid worker who served on the island, says.
Greek people are victims as much as the asylum seekers.
Everyone on the island is.
When COVID-19 hit, it imposed a strange kind of respite.
Sudden lockdowns put a lid on the anti-migrant violence that had threatened to spiral out of control.
But the peace was achieved partly by keeping the population of Moria
penned inside the camp,
even after the rest of the island had eased its restrictive measures. In September, the camp burned down, leaving thousands homeless at the start of winter.
The Greek Coast Guard was credibly accused by the UNHCR and others of organized pushbacks of migrant boats.
At the same time, masked and unidentified Greek officials illegally returned migrants to Turkey, including individuals who were apprehended hundreds of miles inside Greek
territory.
The Greek government has stated that the pushbacks are not illegal and has denied returning migrants
to Turkey.
The pushbacks and other things happening
today wouldn't have been possible in 2015-2016 when there were so many eyes there, big and small,
watching, Shamgoly says. Now it just happens. You just read it in the news and that's it.
news, and that's it. The EU, meanwhile, has seemed to embrace Greece's tactics. In 2020,
the bloc announced 700 million euros in funds for Greece, half of it for immediate use to construct and upgrade border infrastructure. Frontex also deployed an additional force of
100 border guards, supplemented by boats, helicopters, and an aircraft to augment Greek officers.
The European Commission's president,
Ursula von der Leyen,
traveled to the Greek-Turkish border
to praise the combined effort.
This border is not only a Greek border,
it is also a European border, she said.
I thank Greece for being our European shield
in these times.
Sebastian Kurz, then the Austrian Chancellor and head of the right-wing People's Party,
warned EU states against taking in migrants gathered on the Greek-Turkish border.
If we do, he said, soon it will be hundreds of thousands and later maybe millions.
Last August, Binder and Mardini received word that the case against them was moving ahead,
or part of it at least. The years of waiting and delay had finally hit a hard deadline.
In the Greek justice system, police have a maximum of five years to conduct investigations into misdemeanor crimes before the prosecution must decide whether to try the case.
Among the string of charges facing Binder and Mardini were several misdemeanors, including forgery of a license plate.
Because the police dated the beginning of ERCI's criminal activity to the fall of 2016, the five-year window was
about to shut. The felony charges, which can be investigated for up to 15 years before a decision
is made on prosecution, would have to wait. To Binder, the news was not entirely unwelcome.
With his life still on hold, he had decided to study law in London with the aim of becoming a human rights
lawyer. But when he completed his studies and applied to an inn of court, a necessary step in
order to practice in Britain, he was told it was unlikely he would be accepted because of the
outstanding criminal charges against him. Similarly, his British visa application will
most likely be held up as long as the case remains active.
At least a trial would be a first step in settling the matter, he thought,
and proving his innocence.
The trial opened on November 18th.
Greek authorities refused Mardini's request to enter the country,
so she was unable to attend.
In fact, only a handful of the 24 defendants were present.
The indictment listed the accused only by number rather than name,
making it very likely that many of the accused didn't know they were on trial.
Even those in the room didn't know which crimes they'd been accused of.
The writ of summons received by Binder and Mardini
was missing a page.
The proceedings lasted only a few hours.
Around 2 p.m., the case was adjourned,
with a three-member panel of judges
sending it to a superior court.
The next hearing is expected to happen later this year.
At that point, the trial will most likely be adjourned again
for procedural reasons. A couple point, the trial will most likely be adjourned again for procedural reasons.
A couple months after the hearing, Binder and Mardini's lawyers learned that the felony
prosecution was also moving forward. Later this month, the defendants will be delivered a formal
indictment and called to the courthouse in Mytilene to give depositions. Mardini, who remains barred from
entering Greece, will have to receive permission to attend her own trial.
When I spoke to Binder recently, it was the first time in our three years of conversations that I
heard real strain and despondency in his voice. Back home in Britain, he was trying to find ways
to keep up his spirits. Still unable to find work in the field of law,
he was thinking of running for student government at his university.
A campaign called Free Humanitarians was trying to press the case at the EU level
and draw attention to similar prosecutions across the continent.
When Binder first arrived on Lesbos, he hadn't intended to stay more than a few months.
He was 24 when he was arrested.
Today, he's nearing 30.
His lawyers had warned him that the case could take a decade in all to resolve.
He was watching his life recede away from him, month by month, year by year,
at the mercy of a system that has branded him a criminal for trying to help
people whom most others seem content to forget. It was beginning to hit him that his time on the
island would be, one way or another, the defining experience of his life. Despite the toll, he
refused to regret the impulse that brought him to Lesbos in the first place.
The impulse to help.
To regret it is to accept it, he says.
I still resist it.
This shouldn't happen to anyone. Thank you.