This Article is From Oct 23, 2015

12,000 Migrants Arrive in Slovenia; Authorities Ask EU for Help

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Slovenian police officers watch as migrants walk from Dobova towards a transit camp in Brezice, Slovenia October 21, 2015. (Reuters)

Ljubljana/Rigonce, Slovenia : More than 12,000 migrants have crossed into Slovenia in the last 24 hours and thousands more are expected, prompting authorities to ask the rest of the European Union for help dealing with the flood of people.

Slovenia has asked the EU for police to help regulate the flow coming from Croatia, Interior Minister Vesna Gyorkos Znidar told TV Slovenia.

A European Commission sources said Austria, Germany, Italy, Hungary, the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Poland offered to send police reinforcements.

"The European Commission stands ready should Slovenia request emergency funding. We are standing by Slovenia in these difficult moments, Slovenia is not alone," EU's migration commissioner Dimitris Avramopoulos said after meeting Gyorkos Znidar.

Croatia also decided today to seek international help, the news agency Hina reported. The government said it will ask for blankets, winter tents, beds and containers. Since mid-September, 217,000 refugees have entered Croatia.

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Migrants began streaming into Slovenia last Friday, when Hungary closed its border with Croatia. Before then, they were heading for Hungary a member of Europe's Schengen zone of visa-free travel and then north and west to Austria and Germany. Sealing the border diverted them to Slovenia, which is also a member of the Schengen zone.

The daily cost of handling migrants was costing the former Yugoslav Republic 770,000 euros ($856,000)a day, Gyorkos Znidar said.

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'I would go home'

About 2,000 refugees and migrants were kept for hours in cold in a field outside Rigonce at the Croatian border. Later the police escorted them to a nearby refugee camp.

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"I wanted to go to Sweden to continue my studies of banking and finances," Mohammad Labban, a 27-year old Palestinian from Lebanon said. "But now I would rather go home than stay in such horrific conditions," he said.

Earlier, Sweden said it expected up to 190,000 migrants this year, putting unprecedented strain on a country famous for welcoming but which now has little option but to house tens of thousands through the winter in heated tents.

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Mohamed Kattae, 50, a surgeon from the Syrian town of Aleppo who settled in Croatia in the 1980's came to Rigonce with his wife and four children to meet his brother whom he has not seen for 10 years.

"He is so frail and exhausted," he said, after he met his brother.

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"He told me they slept for two days in the fields and in terrible conditions. I offered him to stay in Croatia but he wants to go to Germany," Kattas said.

The European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker called an extraordinary meeting of several European leaders for Sunday.

Juncker invited the leaders of Austria, Bulgaria, Croatia, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Romania, Serbia and Slovenia.
© Thomson Reuters 2015
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