We were without clothes and it was so cold
23.04.2020 | Greek-Turkish border, near Ipsala | Anonymous Partner | 40.929232, 26.393941 | Greece | Turkey | yes | no | no | yes | no | no | 30 - 30 | 30 | Afghanistan, Pakistan, Syria, Algeria | detention, fingerprints taken, photos taken, personal information taken, papers signed, no translator present, denial of access to toilets, beaten by riot police, forced to undress, hair cut, theft of personal belongings | unknown | beating (with batons/hands/other), kicking, pushing people to the ground, water immersion, forcing to undress, theft of personal belongings | Multiple local Greek police officers in Xanthi, Halkidiki, Thessaloniki and Dram, 5 Greek plain clothed officers at border |
The respondent is a 30-year-old Algerian man. On the 3rd of January 2020, he was arrested close to the train station in Xanthi, in north-eastern Greece, after police asked him for his “papers.” This document refers to a temporary residency permit of 30 days which is commonly known as khartia. It demonstrates that the police have identified and registered a third-country national who has entered Greece illegally.
As long as the document is valid, the holder cannot be deported to their country of origin.
[caption id="attachment_16529" align="aligncenter" width="487"] Xanthi, where the respondent was apprehended[/caption]
The respondent was held at a police station in the Halkidiki area (50 km from Thessaloniki) for 35 days and afterwards at the Metagogon Transfer Centre in Thessaloniki for another five days.
While detained, the respondent received 6 Euros per day to spend on food. There was a shower next to his bed but he had to ask the authorities to use the toilet. The facilities were not cleaned and the inmates had to purchase cleaning products themselves.
The respondent reported overserving incidents of excessive force by authorities - daily. He was afraid to ask for his legal rights as he expected to be beaten up or mistreated.
“He said they don’t respect us and they treat us as not human beings. They took the clothes off the people and they take the pictures of them. A lot of bad things happened inside.”
The authorities informed the respondent that he will stay in prison until they decide what they would do with him. He was not given the support of an arabic translator and was forced to sign papers he could not understand as they were in Greek. The respondent did not ask for asylum as he wanted police papers to leave the country. In Halkidiki and Metagogon, the police took pictures and fingerprints of him.
After Metagogon, the respondent was transferred to the Drama Paranesti Preremoval Centre (northeastern Greece) with 40 other male people-on-the-move (POM).
Upon their arrival, local police in “blue uniforms” confiscated the mobile phones and money of the POM. If someone objected, they were subsequently beaten. These personal belongings were never returned.
In Drama, the conditions were reportedly poor and the police inflicted violence upon the detainees. Following a protest over the conditions of their detention, for instance, ten riot police officers were called. Each wore a black uniform, balaclavas and carried a “big shield”, the respondent asserted. They then proceeded to systematically "beat everyone in the camp with sticks and kicks."
