With
scores of tents pitched close together on a muddy field and snaking
queues of people waiting in line for food, you could be forgiven for
thinking these aerial photos show a music festival in full swing.
But,
instead of showing the likes of Glastonbury, these bird's-eye view
photographs actually show a makeshift migrant camp which has sprung up
in the northern Greek village of Idomeni, near the Macedonian border.
At
least 10,000 men, women and children have been camped for days in the
squalid conditions at the Idomeni border crossing, with hundreds more
arriving every single day.
The
first two refugee camps are now so full that thousands have set up
tents in fields nearby, living in appalling conditions.
Hundreds have
been seen queuing for hundreds of yards as they desperately wait to
receive food distributed by a non-governmental organisation.
The
fields on the outskirts of this Greek border town have become the
flashpoint in Europe's massive refugee crisis, the size of which the
continent has not seen since the Second World War.
Greek
police said that in the 24 hours to 6am on Thursday March 03,2016, 500 people were
allowed to cross the border to Macedonia. Some of those, however, were
then turned back by Macedonian authorities who said their papers were
not in order.
The
migrants said Macedonia did not accept computer-generated stamps issued
by the Greek police, and therefore they could not prove their identity
documents are genuine.
Macedonian
authorities have now set up a 19-mile barbed wire boundary, with
parallel lines of 8ft fencing keeping thousands of migrants trapped in
Greece. Only a narrow passage has been left in a bid to control
migration flow, with officials growing increasingly stringent
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