Masked men on EU-funded coastguard boats were caught shipping migrant children out into the open waters after arriving on a Greek island, according to the BBC.
An investigation by the BBC has obtained footage from an aid worker who say they have caught the moment refugees - including women and babies - were put into a speedboat and driven out into the Aegean sea from the island of Lesbos, before being dumped in a rubber dinghy in Turkish waters in April 2023.
A documentary, due to air tonight (Mon) makes a series of shocking allegations about the Greek treatment of refugees arriving on sun-kissed holiday islands, including allegations migrants being thrown into the sea from coast guard boats. It is also a damning indictment of how they say authorities from Greece and the EU dealt with the sinking of the Adriana boat in June of last year, where more than 600 refugees died at sea.
The documentary alleges that the Greek Coastguard caused the boat to sink while towing it towards Italian waters. Frontex, the EU border agency, located the Adriana but did not issue a May-Day warning, the film says, despite there already being dead people on board. The rescue mission was eventually carried out by a Mexican billionaire on a super yacht.
Fayad Mulla told how he had heard rumours of how masked men were hunting refugees when they arrived on Greek islands, attacking them and throwing them in unmarked vans. “It was too much for me to believe at first,” he tells the film. But he claims he discovered Greek police were involved in the kidnappings.
Inside WW1 military hospital abandoned for decades before new lease of lifeHe then found a location on Lesbos where he says he videoed refugees being removed from a white van before being put on a speed boat and transferred to a coast guard boat - and then onto a dinghy in the middle of the sea. He says as he captures the moment: “It’s a strange feeling, watching a crime being committed in front of your eyes. The so-called protectors of the people.” An official Greek investigation is still ongoing into the incident.
The coastguard boat was co-financed by Frontex. Jonas Grimheden, the head of Frontex Fundamental Rights, said they had asked for “clear confirmation” the incident was a one off. Dimitris Baltakos, the former head of the Greek Coastguard’s Special Ops, told the documentary when confronted with the evidence that there is “no way” the Greek Government would give an order to the Coastguard to do anything illegal.
But the documentary alleges that off camera during a break, he is caught saying to a colleague in Greek: “Have I told them too much? It’s crystal clear when you look from the outside. I don’t know why they did it in broad daylight. Its clearly illegal. It’s an international crime.”
While journalist Romy Van Baarsen, based on the island of Samos, claims that she befriended a special forces soldier on dating app Tinder, who told her the coast guard tows back refugee boats to Turkey. He also admits they get into trouble when a boat manages to make it past them onto an island, adding the instruction is “from the Minister, you know?”
BBC analysis has uncovered allegations that the Greek coastguard is linked to the deaths of 43 migrants between 2020 and 2023, including nine people thrown into the sea. A man called Ibrahim describes how he got a visa from Cameroon to Turkey, and from there he tried to cross over to Greece. On September 15, 2001, he was aboard a boat that arrived in Greece. “Just as we docked, the police came from behind us,” he tells the documentary. “They started to shout and they took out their weapons and started shooting. We all ran in different directions.”
He shows a voice note, which he says is a recording of the time, as gunshots rang out when he was hiding. Ibrahim said there were two policemen dressed in black and three others in civilian clothes, and that they were all masked. They were strip searched and beaten before being taken onto a coast guard boat, he said. “They started with the Cameroonian,” he recalled. “They threw him in the water. The Ivorian said ‘save me, I don’t want to die. Save me. Only his hand was above the water and his body was below. Slowly his hand slipped under and the water engulfed him.”
He claims threw threw him in the water, he said, but he managed to survive. “I am testifying for the oppressed,” he added. “I want my time on earth to be a testimony for others. Because of the way they threw us in, without remorse, without pity, without sorrow, I knew it’s not their first time.”
The bodies of two men were discovered on the Turkish coastline, the film says, adding they were last seen alive on Samos island. They were named as Sidy Keita, 36, and Didier Martial Kouamou Nana, 33. Ibrahim’s lawyers are demanding Greek authorities open a double murder case. Robin Jenkins, founder of Atlantic Pacific Search and Rescue, said: “To be thrown overboard, without life jackets. That’s murder.”
Greek authorities and the Hellenic Coastguard did not wish to be interviewed for the film. They strongly rejected all accusations of illegal activities and said their operational practices strictly comply with the applicable international and national legal framework.
The Fayad Mulla video is being investigated by the independent national transparency authority. The Adriana case is under three institutional investigations by both judicial and independent authorities. Frontex says they made four separate offers to assist the Greek authorities with aerial surveillance but received no response.
US Navy Seal team's message for Saddam Hussein after being captured in IraqIn February this year, the EU Ombudsman found in the Adriana case that Frontex had followed the applicable rules and protocols but they suggested it terminate operations in Greece In May 2023. A Frontex Fundamental Rights Report acknowledged strong indications of persisting fundamental rights violations of a serious nature in Greece.
Dead Calm: Killing in the Med? is on tonight (Mon) on BBC2 at 9pm