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数千中东难民在匈牙利首都布达佩斯火车站和匈牙利防暴警察发生冲突,起因是原来一部火车据说可以把他们送往德国,德国方面改变主意,火车要改道驶向匈牙利某偏僻地方的难民营。
联合国难民署估计,现在有800万到1000万中东难民(主要是叙利亚)正在去欧洲的逃亡路上,欧洲陷入难民危机
http://www.cbc.ca/radio/thecurrent/...nsor-refugees-as-governments-dither-1.3213897
http://www.cbc.ca/news/world/migran...-hungary-as-eu-argues-over-solution-1.3212425
Migrant crisis: Refugees protest in Hungary as EU argues over solution
Budapest, the Hungary-Serbia border, a Turkish resort town, Vienna and the Greece-Macedonia border all saw various clashes or scenes of devastation related to the refugee crisis.
Scores of officers pushed back the crowd, which shouted in Arabic and English to be permitted to march around the Keleti train station, which has become the latest focal point for European tensions over an unrelenting flow of refugees from the Middle East, Asia and Africa.
Passions also flared on Hungary's border with Serbia as right-wing nationalist protesters marched to the location where refugees use a train track to walk into the country. Police formed protective circles around frightened refugees as the demonstrators from the hard-line Jobbik party screamed abuse at them.
The 28-nation European Union has been at odds for months on how to deal with the influx of more than 332,000 refugees this year. Such front-line nations as Greece, Italy and Hungary have pleaded for more help, while Germany, which is expecting to receive an EU-leading 800,000 asylum seekers this year, has appealed for EU partners to bear more of the load.
"We have to reinstate law and order at the borders of the European Union, including the border with Serbia," Hungarian government spokesman Zoltan Kovacs said. "Without re-establishing law and order, it will be impossible to handle the influx of migrants."
He said Hungary's prime minister, Viktor Orban, will take a "clear and obvious message" to a meeting Thursday with EU chiefs in Brussels about refugees.
On Hungary's border with Serbia, some 300 extremists led by Jobbik party leaders waved Hungarian and party flags as they marched to the border crossing and shouted at the frightened refugees — many of whom had just completed a day-long hike along the rail line — to go back where they came from.
Police escorted more than 50 refugees out of harm's way and, in an unusual move that underscored the often-chaotic handling of refugees in the country, permitted them to run free through a field rather than start the process of claiming asylum. Hundreds of other refugees stayed on the Serb side of the border until the protesters dispersed.
"I am a mother, I am Hungarian, this is Hungary, and they have to go home," said 57-year-old protester Aniko Cserep.
Trains blocked
Authorities announced over loudspeakers that all trains would be stopped indefinitely from leaving. Migrants' papers were checked, and those with train tickets but no EU visas were ushered out of the station.
A child holds a self-made placard reading "SOS help me" outside the railways station in Budapest, Hungary on Wednesday. (Laszlo Balogh/Reuters)
But Hungary's national rail company, Mav, said it no longer would sell train tickets to customers who could not present proper ID and, where required, visas. It said customers would be allowed to buy only tickets for themselves, not multiple purchases.
By evening rush hour, the train station was unusually quiet as most commuters found other ways home. But outside, more than 300 people continued to protest.
For its part, the Czech Republic announced Wednesday it no longer intended to prevent Syrians who had already claimed asylum in Hungary from travelling via its territory to Germany. The Czechs previously had detained Syrian refugees, as well as those from other nations, for up to 42 days. The policy change may allow Syrian refugees to travel more freely to Germany's capital because the most direct Hungarian trains to Berlin pass through the Czech Republic.
12 drowned off Turkish coast
At other pressure points in the route into Europe, Turkish officials said that at least 12 migrants, including five children, drowned as they tried to cross the sea to Greece.
Photos of one of the drowned children has been circulating on social media, sparking questions about whether it is too graphic to be shared online.
And French authorities said cross-Channel Eurostar trains were returning to normal Wednesday after serious overnight disruptions triggered by reports of migrants running on the undersea tunnel tracks and trying to climb atop trains.
联合国难民署估计,现在有800万到1000万中东难民(主要是叙利亚)正在去欧洲的逃亡路上,欧洲陷入难民危机
http://www.cbc.ca/radio/thecurrent/...nsor-refugees-as-governments-dither-1.3213897
http://www.cbc.ca/news/world/migran...-hungary-as-eu-argues-over-solution-1.3212425
Migrant crisis: Refugees protest in Hungary as EU argues over solution
- Hundreds clash with riot police at Budapest train station
- 12 refugees, including children, drown off Turkish coast
- EU at odds ahead of Thursday meeting over how to handle crisis
Budapest, the Hungary-Serbia border, a Turkish resort town, Vienna and the Greece-Macedonia border all saw various clashes or scenes of devastation related to the refugee crisis.
Scores of officers pushed back the crowd, which shouted in Arabic and English to be permitted to march around the Keleti train station, which has become the latest focal point for European tensions over an unrelenting flow of refugees from the Middle East, Asia and Africa.
Passions also flared on Hungary's border with Serbia as right-wing nationalist protesters marched to the location where refugees use a train track to walk into the country. Police formed protective circles around frightened refugees as the demonstrators from the hard-line Jobbik party screamed abuse at them.
The 28-nation European Union has been at odds for months on how to deal with the influx of more than 332,000 refugees this year. Such front-line nations as Greece, Italy and Hungary have pleaded for more help, while Germany, which is expecting to receive an EU-leading 800,000 asylum seekers this year, has appealed for EU partners to bear more of the load.
"We have to reinstate law and order at the borders of the European Union, including the border with Serbia," Hungarian government spokesman Zoltan Kovacs said. "Without re-establishing law and order, it will be impossible to handle the influx of migrants."
He said Hungary's prime minister, Viktor Orban, will take a "clear and obvious message" to a meeting Thursday with EU chiefs in Brussels about refugees.
On Hungary's border with Serbia, some 300 extremists led by Jobbik party leaders waved Hungarian and party flags as they marched to the border crossing and shouted at the frightened refugees — many of whom had just completed a day-long hike along the rail line — to go back where they came from.
Police escorted more than 50 refugees out of harm's way and, in an unusual move that underscored the often-chaotic handling of refugees in the country, permitted them to run free through a field rather than start the process of claiming asylum. Hundreds of other refugees stayed on the Serb side of the border until the protesters dispersed.
"I am a mother, I am Hungarian, this is Hungary, and they have to go home," said 57-year-old protester Aniko Cserep.
Trains blocked
Authorities announced over loudspeakers that all trains would be stopped indefinitely from leaving. Migrants' papers were checked, and those with train tickets but no EU visas were ushered out of the station.
A child holds a self-made placard reading "SOS help me" outside the railways station in Budapest, Hungary on Wednesday. (Laszlo Balogh/Reuters)
But Hungary's national rail company, Mav, said it no longer would sell train tickets to customers who could not present proper ID and, where required, visas. It said customers would be allowed to buy only tickets for themselves, not multiple purchases.
By evening rush hour, the train station was unusually quiet as most commuters found other ways home. But outside, more than 300 people continued to protest.
For its part, the Czech Republic announced Wednesday it no longer intended to prevent Syrians who had already claimed asylum in Hungary from travelling via its territory to Germany. The Czechs previously had detained Syrian refugees, as well as those from other nations, for up to 42 days. The policy change may allow Syrian refugees to travel more freely to Germany's capital because the most direct Hungarian trains to Berlin pass through the Czech Republic.
12 drowned off Turkish coast
At other pressure points in the route into Europe, Turkish officials said that at least 12 migrants, including five children, drowned as they tried to cross the sea to Greece.
Photos of one of the drowned children has been circulating on social media, sparking questions about whether it is too graphic to be shared online.
And French authorities said cross-Channel Eurostar trains were returning to normal Wednesday after serious overnight disruptions triggered by reports of migrants running on the undersea tunnel tracks and trying to climb atop trains.
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