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HUNGARY

Chaos at Hungary border as police fire tear gas at migrants

Hungarian riot police fired tear gas and water cannon Wednesday at crowds of refugees and migrants desperate to cross the border from Serbia, while others carved out a new route and headed for Croatia.

Armend Nimani / AFP | Hungarian police used tear gas during clashes with migrants at the border with Serbia on Wednesday September, 16 2015
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Tensions boiled over at the flashpoint Horgos-Roszke crossing, where hundreds of furious people tore down the wire meshing separating them from Hungarian territory, and police clashed for hours with migrants, some of whom threw stones, sticks and plastic bottles.

"I hate you, Hungary. Thank you, Serbia," said one Iraqi migrant, Hussan, clutching a stone as he rushed at the Hungarian police.

The unrest left 14 police officers injured, the authorities said.

Serbia lodged a formal protest with Hungary over the use of tear gas on its territory, and Interior Minister Nebojsa Stefanovic said police reinforcements were being sent to the Serbian side of the border to help calm tensions.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said he was "shocked" by Budapest's actions, as hundreds of people fleeing war and misery, many of them Syrians, remained stranded at Hungary's newly fenced-off border.

"We want to leave! We want to leave to Germany!" cried one French-speaking man at a migrants' protest at the border through a megaphone. "Open the door!" he added in English, with hundreds echoing his call.

Crowds who managed to overrun police lines and break through the fence in the Hungarian town of Roszke did not take advantage to run deeper into the central European country's territory however, apparently wanting instead to show their frustration after Budapest sealed the border on Tuesday, an AFP correspondent said.

In the chaos, at least four children were separated from their families and apparently taken by police to a nearby border control building, rights group Amnesty International said.

"The families are desperate to be reunited with their children. Not only have they experienced the traumatic journey to the border and the use of force by the police -- they have now lost the security of being with their parents," said crisis response director Tirana Hassan.

'Not acceptable'

 

Gyorgy Bakondi, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban's chief adviser, said the tough response came an hour after the migrants had issued an "ultimatum" to police, demanding to be let through.

"We will repair the fence, in fact we will put up a stronger fence," he told a news conference.

Hungary also deployed three military vehicles mounted with guns some 100 to 200 metres (yards) from the border, an AFP reporter at the scene said.

The UN refugee agency has criticised Hungary's hardline anti-migrant stance, saying it could violate the 1951 Refugee Convention.

Hungary on Tuesday closed the razorwire-topped border while threatening three-year jail sentences against anyone who crosses illegally.

Migrants desperate to find new ways to eastern Europe were Wednesday granted access by Croatia.

By evening, some 1,300 people had entered the Balkan nation, Interior Minister Ranko Ostojic said, adding that Croatia was not considering closing the frontier.

"I would not discuss such a scenario at this moment. We have good control of our borders," he told reporters.

More fences

 

Pressure is building for an EU summit to come up with solutions to the continent's worst migration crisis since World War II, with the bloc bitterly split and free movement across borders -- a pillar of the European project -- in jeopardy.

Croatian Prime Minister Zoran Milanovic said all migrants could pass through the EU state, allowing them to push on towards Slovenia, Austria and Hungary's fenceless southwestern frontier.

"We are ready to accept and direct those people. Their religion and colour of skin is completely irrelevant to where they apparently wish to go -- Germany and Scandinavia," Milanovic told lawmakers.

In an interview with French newspaper Le Figaro to be published Thursday, Hungary's Orban said he also wanted to build fences on its borders with Croatia and Romania.

"The fact is the migrants keep coming. We managed to stop them at the Hungarian border, but this did not stop the influx itself," he said.

Domino effect

 

From the Alps to Istanbul, thousands of other migrants were caught in similar bottlenecks, with hundreds setting out to walk to Germany from the Austrian border city of Salzburg after trains north were suspended.

Germany, Austria and Slovakia have all reimposed identity checks on parts of their borders, and Poland and the Netherlands are considering whether to follow suit.

Politically, the big concern is for the future of Europe's 20-year-old Schengen agreement, which governs borderless travel between member states, and is considered as important as the euro by many EU supporters.

Berlin's decision Wednesday to extend greater passport controls to its border with France -- the Schengen zone's other principal architect -- seemed to deal it another huge blow.

(AFP)

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