More than 400 migrants board deportation flight to Iraq as Belarus border tensions rise

0
230

More than 400 migrants, who have camped for weeks at Belarus’ borders with the EU, have boarded a deportation flight bound for Iraq.

Some 430 people, mostly Iraqi Kurds, were booked onto a flight due to leave this afternoon from Minsk airport, the Iraqi foreign ministry said.

They were due to board the flight at 1.45pm, bound for Erbil in Iraq‘s autonomous northern Kurdistan region, and then on to Baghdad, the ministry added.

Image:
Iraqi migrants wait for an evacuation flight at Minsk airport

Image:
Some 430 Iraqis checked in the flight, which is headed for Erbil and then Baghdad

Iraqis, especially Kurds, make up a significant number of the estimated 4,000 migrants trapped at the Belarus border trying to cross into Lithuania, Latvia and Poland.

Buses and planes are also being organised to relocate some of men, women and children camping there after two weeks of rising tensions.

Advertisement

‘I am scared’: Messages of regret and warnings from migrants on the Belarus-Poland border

The EU has accused Belarus of encouraging migrants towards its borders in retaliation for sanctions over a crackdown on protests last year against President Alexander Lukashenko‘s contested re-election.

Mr Lukashenko said Belarus was trying to persuade migrants to go home but that none of them wanted to return.

More on Belarus

‘I am scared’: Messages of regret and warnings from migrants on the Belarus-Poland border

Cold and wet migrants evicted from camp near Dunkirk won’t stop until they reach British shores

The West faces a test of unity over Russia as tensions intensify between Moscow and NATO

Many migrants say they have been prevented from returning through Belarus.

Poland’s Border Guard tweeted on Thursday that there had been 501 attempts to cross the border on Wednesday, with one group consisting of about 500 people – an increase from previous days.

Image:
At least eight people have died at the border in recent months

Poland’s Defence Ministry said that one of the attempts – by a group of about 100 people – was inspired by Belarusian forces.

At least eight people have died at the border in recent months, including a 19-year-old Syrian man who drowned in a river trying to cross to the EU.