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Mayor says there’s no more room left on Greek island of Lesbos to bury dead refugees

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Warning: Graphic images

The mayor of the Greek island of Lesbos says there’s no more room to bury the increasing number of asylum-seekers killed in shipwrecks of smuggling boats coming in from nearby Turkey.

Mayor Spyros Galinos told Greece’s Vima FM radio Monday he was still trying to find a burial location for more than 50 bodies in the morgue on his eastern Aegean island.

Galinos said he was trying to fast-track procedures so a field next to the main cemetery could be taken over for burials.

Hundreds of thousands of people have made the short but dangerous crossing from Turkey to Greek islands this year. With rougher fall weather coming on, the bodies of 19 people were recovered from the Aegean in three separate incidents on Sunday alone.

Meanwhile, Germany will be turning away certain Afghan migrants — who currently make up the second largest nationality, after Syrians, arriving in Europe — as the country struggles to accommodate hundreds of thousands of refugees.

A Kabul official says Afghanistan will take back all its citizens to be deported from Germany. So far this year, an estimated 120,000 Afghans have left the country, legally and illegally, according to authorities. The International Organization of Migration says more than 76,000 Afghans have migrated to Europe so far in 2015.

ARIS MESSINIS / AFP / Getty Images
ARIS MESSINIS / AFP / Getty Imagesthe body of a child washed up ashore on the Greek Lesbos island on Monday.

Germany, a longtime contributor to international forces in Afghanistan and with currently 944 soldiers in NATO’s support and training mission there, has increasingly been feeling the pressure of the rising numbers of people coming in.

Last week, Germany’s interior minister complained of an “unacceptable” influx of Afghans from relatively safe areas of their country, and warned that many of them would have to return home. The minister, Thomas de Maiziere, said Afghans arriving in Germany included “increasing numbers of members of the middle class — including many from Kabul.”

It isn’t clear how many Afghans Germany might try to send back. However, German officials have been keen to stress that only people genuinely fleeing war and persecution are entitled to asylum, and that economic migrants must leave the country. Fewer than half of the Afghans who apply for asylum in Germany are granted it.

ARIS MESSINIS / AFP / Getty Images
ARIS MESSINIS / AFP / Getty ImagesRefugees and migrants arrive on the Greek Lesbos island after crossing the Aegean Sea from Turkey on Monday.

As a signatory to the Geneva Convention, Afghanistan is obliged to accept its citizens whose asylum applications have been rejected, deputy presidential spokesman Zafar Hashemi said, adding that President Ashraf Ghani and German Chancellor Angela Merkel discussed the issue recently.

Afghan Minister for Refugees and Repatriation Hossain Alemi Balkhi has disapproved of Germany’s decision to return the Afghans, saying in a recent interview with The Associated Press that Kabul is “against the forced exile of any people from any country back to where they came from.”

“The problem that caused them to leave Afghanistan in the first place has not been solved — there is still war, conflict, insecurity,” he said.


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