Turkish
authorities on Saturday detained at least two human traffickers after
they shuttled some 120 Syrian refugees to the Aegean coast in a sign
Turkey may be stepping up efforts to curb the flow of migrants to
Europe. Gendarmes stopped
the group, mostly made up of women and children, on a beach near a
wooded area by the village of Bademli, located across from the Greek
island of Lesbos, a Reuters witness said. The
raid occurred on the eve of a summit in Brussels Monday at which Turkey
and the EU will tackle the migrant crisis after more than a million
people fleeing turmoil in the Middle East, Africa and Asia sought safety
and prosperity in Europe in 2015. The influx has revealed political faultlines among European Union states and threatened the bloc's open-border policy. Europe
wants candidate country Turkey to step up security along its coast and
take back migrants caught at sea to help reduce the flow of refugees to
the EU. In exchange it has pledged 3 billion euros ($3.3 billion) in
funds to help Turkey with the 2.7 million Syrian refugees it hosts. President Tayyip Erdogan late on Friday accused the EU of dragging its feet on the funds four months. "You
can pay up or not, we have not closed our door to refugees like
Westerners have. We've kept it open," Erdogan said, adding he wants to
build a city for refugees in northern Syria near the Turkish border with
international money but has not received concrete support for the plan
from other countries. On the coast,
at least one trafficker escaped on foot, while officers towed away the
half-dozen or so minibuses they had driven to the coast. The refugees,
who included a pregnant women and newborns, were bussed back to the port
city of Izmir. One Syrian who appeared to be in his 30s said he was forced to attempt the route because of a lack of opportunity in Turkey. "It's
not bad here but there is no work. I have relatives in Germany and will
go to be with them," he said, declining to give his name. Separately, news
media reported that Turkey had shut its last open border gate with Syria
to all traffic except for humanitarian aid convoys and Syrians wishing
to leave. The report on CNN Turk
did not give a reason for the decision to shut the Cilvegozu gate in
Turkey's southern Hatay province, located across from Syria's Bab
al-Hawa.
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