Yahoo – AFP,
January 2, 2016
Athens (AFP) - Rights groups briefly transformed a mountain of discarded life jackets used by refugees who crossed the Aegean Sea into a huge peace sign on the hills of the Greek island of Lesbos.
Athens (AFP) - Rights groups briefly transformed a mountain of discarded life jackets used by refugees who crossed the Aegean Sea into a huge peace sign on the hills of the Greek island of Lesbos.
The giant
symbol, which was made out of around 3,000 flourescent orange life jackets, was
created on a hillside overlooking the 10-kilometre (six mile) stretch of water
between the island's northern shores and the Turkish coastline, the Greenpeace
website said.
It was
formed on New Year's Day by around 100 volunteers from Greenpeace, Doctors
Without Borders, Sea-Watch and the Dutch Refugee Boat Foundation as well as the
local community group, Starfish.
The groups
created the peace sign "on New Year's Day to bring in 2016 with a message
of hope," with Greenpeace's Florian Schulz telling AFP it took
three-to-four hours to create the giant symbol, which measured 10 metres from
side-to-side.
But it was
later removed as the group did not have permission to leave it there.
"We had
no permission for the sign to stay in the hills so we dismantled it and cleaned
up the dump," Schulz told AFP.
UN figures
show that more than half a million people have crossed Aegean Sea to Lesbos
alone over the past year, accounting for nearly 60 percent of the 850,000 who
reached Greece by boat in 2015.
The vast
majority were refugees fleeing war and violence in Syria, Afghanistan and Iraq,
with the life jackets they used left at a dump near the village of Molyvos,
Greenpeace said.
![]() |
A man
reacts as he arrives, with other refugees and migrants, on the Greek
island of
Lesbos, on October 28, 2015, after crossing the Aegean sea from
Turkey (AFP
Photo/ARIS MESSINIS)
|
'A silent
reminder'
"The
dump site stands as a statue, a silent reminder of the risks and that so many
more still hold out hope of a safe crossing. It also includes the life jackets
of those who never made it, of those who lost their lives at sea and can never
return home or continue their journey north," it said.
More than
one million migrants and refugees have entered Europe this year, four out of
five of whom reached the continent via the Greek islands. Although the arrivals
has declined since the autumn, around 60,000 arrived on Lesbos in December, UN
figures show.
Chinese
dissident artist Ai Weiwei on Friday said he was planning to create a memorial
on Lesbos to the plight of refugees, many of whom have died trying to reach
Europe.
"A lot
of people have lost their lives under the waves... we need a memorial," he
told AFP after a news conference on the project.
"I
already set up a studio in Lesbos. Next year we are going to be involved with
different projects," he added.
Chinese artist Weiwei to create refugee memorial on Lesbos https://t.co/CQZDJPsrDR pic.twitter.com/S1lyTTU0PA
— Agence France-Presse (@AFP) January 1, 2016


No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.