The hotel from hell: Migrants cram abandoned resort with no power, no toilets and no food
The carcass of an abandoned hotel on the Greek island of Kos has become a grim shelter for scores of migrants fleeing war and poverty as Europe faces its worst refugee crisis in decades.
Dozens of people sit around the empty swimming pool, others lie on mattresses cramming the reception area of the Captain Elias hotel, while tents and huts cobbled together from cardboard and branches fill the garden.
The fields beyond serve as toilets, the fence as a washing line to dry clothes.
“No one has come to give us food in four days. And even when someone comes, it’s never enough. We are too many people here,” said Ersha, a 25-year-old engineer from Herat, Afghanistan, who has run out of money after paying smugglers US$5,000 (4,500 euros) to reach Kos.
The Greek island has come to symbolise Europe’s shambolic response to the refugee crisis which EU Migration Commissioner Dimitris Avramopoulos described on Friday as “the worst since the Second World War”.
Last week their were chaotic scenes when overwhelmed police beat migrants with truncheons and sprayed them with fire extinguishers at a sports stadium on the island, where 2,000 refugees had been gathered for processing.