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Europol sends 30 anti-terror experts to track jihadists in Greece’s refugee camps

The EU joint police agency, Europol, will deploy a team of anti-terror experts to Greece in an attempt to single out potential jihadists among the 58,000 refugees and migrants stuck in the country, France24 reports.

The team of 30 European experts will land in Athens by 20 August and travel on to the refugee camps.

In its 2015 terrorism situation report published last month Europol said there was no evidence that terrorists systematically use refugee routes to enter the EU, although there have been single cases of this happening.

Some members of the terrorist group behind the attacks in Paris and Brussels, in November 2015 and March 2016, were EU nationals who travelled to Syria to receive training by the self-proclaimed Islamic State (IS). They slipped back into Europe afterwards by passing themselves off as refugees.

Europol noted in its report that the bigger threat was that Syrian refugees would fall prey to extremist recruiters once in Europe.

EU experts will work to identify individuals who risk being radicalised after being stuck in Greece’s camps, Europol spokesperson Alexandru Niculae told France24.

The expert team from the European police agency Europol will be tasked with identifying individuals who could be in the process of being radicalised.

Europol spokesperson Alexandru Niculae told FRANCE 24 that the team will be involved in secondary security checks rather than first-line border control.

“In a nutshell, Europol cross-checks data submitted by its partners against data held in specialist counter-terrorist and other Europol databases,” said Niculae.

Europol exchanges information with EU member states and shares in analysis

Earlier this year, Europol sent teams to Greece’s “hotspots”, the special detention camps where migrants are supposed to be processed.

Greece has vowed to close down some of its most depressing camps [Idomeni] and replace them with better functioning ones.

Greek migration minister Ioannis Mouzalas told the Kathimerini newspaper that there was only around 80-100 people arriving in the country each day, compared with many thousands at the height of the crisis last year. (via Euobserver)

It is not clear how long the Europol team will stay in Greece and who will come up to their expenses and the general cost of the mission.

PS August 20th? that’s today…

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One comment

  1. Giaourti Giaourtaki

    So far only faked passports were found in Paris, one has to wait until some courts will verify that attackers were using these passports or if they were just dropped from the sky by a Amazon-drone