‘Refugees are welcome here’: Thousands march in Berlin to support migrants, Greece


Activists attend a demonstration on World Refugee Day in Berlin, Germany, June 20, 2015. The banner reads, “No to austerity measures – international solidarity”. (Reuters/Hannibal Hanschke)

Thousands have taken to the streets of Berlin to express their solidarity with asylum seekers coming to Europe. The activists also expressed their support for the people of Greece, who are suffering from a long-running debt crisis.

Organized by German opposition parties Die Linke (The Left) and
Gruenen (The Greens), as well as other organizations, the
protest coincided with UN World Refugee Day.

German police estimated up to 2,500 people attended the rally.

The crowds were marching from the Kreuzberg district to the
famous Brandenburg gate in central Berlin.

Protesters were chanting pro-immigration slogans: “No
frontiers, no nations, stop deportation!,”
“Say it loud,
say it clear, refugees are welcome here.”

“Europe. Democratic. Solidarity. No Frontiers,” said one
of the banners, carried by activists.

Reuters/Hannibal Hanschke

The protesters say they are against the frequent mass casualties
in the Mediterranean Sea, where thousands of migrants – mostly
from war and famine-torn countries – die trying to make their way
to Europe seeking a better life.

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The demonstrators also expressed objections to the way EU states
handle those who manage to cross the sea, isolating them in
detention camps and centers.

“According to migrant quotas Germany can host 30,000
refugees. And I think it’s a shame because Germany can take at
least one million migrants,”
one of the activists told RT.

Some demonstrators also came to the rally to show their support
for Greece, which has recently failed to reach a deal with
Eurogroup at bailout talks intended to break the deadlock between
Athens and its international creditors.

“Technocratic, cold and neoliberal Europe that is led by
Germany is unbearable,”
one of the banners said.


“We say no we are not on the side of our German government, of
the European capital [Brussels] but on the side of the
workers,”
another protestor added.

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Greece is struggling to repay its multibillion euro debt to the
Troika of international lenders (the IMF, the ECB and the
European Commission), and is trying to find a way to unlock a
further €7.2 billion bailout.

However, little progress has been made in the ongoing talks
between the Greek side and the financial institutions, with no
agreement still in sight, as the lenders require Greece to impose
austerity measures as precondition while the new government of
Alexis Tsipras has rejected the possibility of the country’s
return to sweeping cuts.

Meanwhile, the IMF’s chief Christine Lagarde has warned that on
July 1, Greece “will be in default” with the fund if it
fails to pay off its debt by the June 30 deadline.

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