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News / Nation & World

Cyprus rights official says young migrants in ‘miserable’ camp

Unaccompanied minors have little to eat, facilities poor

By MENELAOS HADJICOSTIS, Associated Press
Published: March 10, 2022, 4:38pm
3 Photos
Migrants stand outside of Pournara migrant reception center in Kokkinotrimithia outside of capital Nicosia, Cyprus, on Thursday, March 10, 2022. Cyprus' Commissioner for Children's Rights Despo Michaelidou said unaccompanied minors at the island's overcrowded migrant reception camp on the capital's outskirts continued to protest Thursday what she called "miserable" and "unhygienic" conditions there.
Migrants stand outside of Pournara migrant reception center in Kokkinotrimithia outside of capital Nicosia, Cyprus, on Thursday, March 10, 2022. Cyprus' Commissioner for Children's Rights Despo Michaelidou said unaccompanied minors at the island's overcrowded migrant reception camp on the capital's outskirts continued to protest Thursday what she called "miserable" and "unhygienic" conditions there. (AP Photo/Petros Karadjias) (petros KARADJIAS/Associated Press) Photo Gallery

NICOSIA, Cyprus — The war in Ukraine has focused the world’s attention on the plight of millions fleeing the country. But migrants from sub-Saharan Africa, Asia and elsewhere continue to reach ethnically divided Cyprus, where authorities say they’re overwhelmed.

On the outskirts of the capital, Nicosia, Somali teenager Haroun, who left his home a month ago, plays soccer in a pair of cheap slippers behind an overcrowded migrant reception camp.

The sockless 16-year-old said his mother sent him to Cyprus in the hope that he could join other families seeking a better life in Europe. He said no one has spoken to him about his circumstances since he arrived last month, when reception center officials simply took down his details.

Like tens of thousands before him, the teenager said he flew to the island’s breakaway Turkish Cypriot north and crossed by car through the porous, United Nations-controlled buffer zone to the south.

Some 85 percent of migrants who reach the north slip across the buffer zone put in place after Turkey’s 1974 invasion that was prompted by a coup aiming at union with Greece.

Haroun said Thursday that the quality of food served at the center was a key problem. “If the food isn’t OK, then nothing is OK,” he said.

A day earlier, Cyprus’ commissioner for children’s rights criticized conditions for unaccompanied minors at the Pournara reception center as “miserable” and “unhygienic,” with inadequate food and water and as many as 15 people sharing a room.

Commissioner Despo Michaelidou said a team from her office had inspected the center to look into why a group of about 30 minors staged a protest over the “unacceptable” conditions.

In a statement, Michaelidou quoted the minors as saying that breakfast consists of only a “small piece of bread” and they don’t get anything hot to drink in the chilly, late-winter mornings.

She said they’re usually given only a small bottle of water in the afternoon to last through the day, while minors often have to share a bed or sleep on the floor. There are only two toilets and a single shower for the 300 unaccompanied minors, Michaelides said.

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