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Refugee crisis edges further onto domestic political agenda
PoliticsForeign PolicyMonday’s summit between the European Union and Turkey to discuss the refugee crisis is taking on ever greater importance for the Greek government. With the situation at the border in Idomeni, and other spots around Greece, becoming increasingly difficult to manage due to the rising number
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EU-Turkey refugee plan: One for one and none for all
Agora, opening the gates to let a few people in at the Idomeni crossing sometimes and closing them completely... raised serious doubts about the safety and legality of sending back asylum seekers en masse to Turkey
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Declining flow of refugees gives struggling government some hope
PoliticsForeign Policy. Authorities have stepped up efforts to move people away from the camp at Idomeni, on Greece’s northern
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Significant fall in migrant arrivals but camp conditions a growing concern
PoliticsGreek Politicsrefugees hit by a police van at the Idomeni camp in northern Greece died on Thursday, while another
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Greek effort to heal rift with Balkan neighbours may have come too late
PoliticsForeign Policythe violence used by FYROM’s police and border guards against refugees at the border with Idomeni
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Newsletter 72 - 06/05/2016
shores of Lesvos, the muddy fields of Idomeni, the arid expanse of Lampedusa or the daunting streets
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Locating Europe's pulse in the refugee crisis
AgoraEduardo Galeano. Whether it is the rocky shores of Lesvos, the muddy fields of Idomeni, the arid expanse
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Tsipras faces challenge in turning promise of China trip into reality
PoliticsForeign Policythe strikes in Piraeus and possible further difficulties in Idomeni, where refugees camped on railway
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Greek media often sensationalised coverage of refugee crisis, study argues
Societyin the report: “Idomeni was the critical point. Media changed their approach towards the refugees. They were
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A summit of little substance
Agoraon the outcome of the European Parliament elections next May. The chances are high that anti-EU, anti-euro, anti-immigrant, and/or anti-establishment/elitist parties or movements will generally do well... with, and the climate within, the Parliament. Even more importantly, the success of ‘anti-parties’ could have
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