Refugee Crisis: Migrants Detour to Croatia, Where Landmine Dangers Loom

Germany Closes Border to Refugees

(CNN) — Huddling next to the razor-wire fence blocking Hungary from Serbia, battle-worn migrants beg for sympathy.

“Open the door!” they chant, many having traveled thousands of miles carrying all the belongings they had.

A young Iraqi man from Karbala in a soccer jersey waited next to the fence with no intention to move.

“We’ll wait here for six years if we have to,” he said. “We have nothing left to lose.”

On the other side of the barbed wire, Hungarian authorities stood guard, ready to arrest and jail anyone who dares to climb the fence.

A Syrian refugee from Aleppo said he can’t understand why Hungary won’t let them go through.

“We want to pass to Germany, Austria, Hungary, Denmark,” the man said, his words aimed at the Hungarian Prime Minister. “No one wants to stay in your country.”

New destination: Croatia
Some migrants have given up on trying to get into cross from Serbia to Hungary. More than 100 refugees from the Middle East have ventured into Croatia, Croatian Interior Ministry spokeswoman Jelena Bikic said Wednesday.

And that country appears to be much more welcoming than Hungary.

“We are ready to accept people. It doesn’t matter what religion or nationality they are or the country where they would like to go to,” Croatian Prime Minister Zoran Milanovic said, according to a tweet by the government.

“These people are here, they want to work, to create. They don’t want to come to Croatia nor Hungary, but they will be able to pass through Croatia.”

The Croatian government said it has been preparing for refugees for weeks, even conducting simulations on how to handle thousands of people.

Milanovic also had harsh words for the Hungarian government and its blockage of migrants:
“I believe the policy in Budapest of raising walls is dangerous and cruel,” he said, according to the Croatian government’s tweet. “Wire in Europe in the 21st century isn’t the answer but rather a threat.”

The danger of landmines
Migrants who survived the perilous journey across the Mediterranean Sea could face another danger: landmines.

Medecins Sans Frontieres, one of the aid groups assisting with the refugee crisis, warned about the presence of Balkan landmines.

“Safe and legal routes needed now: #refugees may inadvertently stray into Balkan minefields in search for ways round new border restrictions,” tweeted the aid agency, also known as Doctors Without Borders.

The Croatian Mine Action Centre estimates about 51,000 mines are still buried as remnants of the Balkan Wars in the wake of Yugoslavia’s collapse in the 1990s.

But the Croatian government said minefields are clearly marked with large signs.

Some of those landmines are close to the Serbian border — where many of the incoming migrants would be entering.

Hrvoje Debac, an adviser with Croatia’s Office for Mine Action, said the office urges people to stay by the roads and not venture into the woodlands.

Trains to Germany stopped
Some trains headed from Salzburg, Austria, to Germany have been stopped by the German Federal Police, the German train authority Deutsche Bahn said Wednesday.

Deutsche Bahn said it was waiting for clearance to allow a few trains to move again.

It was not immediately clear why German authorities stopped the trains, but the order came a day after 180 people jumped off a train.

Someone used the emergency brake to slow down the train before the people jumped off, Deutsche Bahn said.

Salzburg state police spokesman Michael Rausch said migrants may have jumped off the trains to avoid newly established control points.

Google to match aid donations
With the world facing its biggest migrant crisis since World War II, Google announced it will match the first $5.5 million donated globally to help migrants, up to a combined $11 million.

The tech giant said the funds will go to Network for Good, which will then distribute the money as needed to Doctors Without Borders, the International Rescue Committee, Save the Children and the U.N. refugee agency.

A massive crisis
More than 430,000 migrants have fled to Europe so far this year, the International Organization for Migration said. Many are escaping warfare, terrorism and poverty from countries such as Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan and Eritrea.

Migrants typically cross the Mediterranean and try to go through Greece, Macedonia, Serbia, Hungary and Austria before finally reaching Germany or other European countries known to be welcoming to refugees.

The European Union is still trying to figure out how to distribute 160,000 migrants — and whether to set quotas for member countries to absorb them.

That number includes 40,000 from Italy and Greece that the EU had already agreed to relocate. Another 120,000 need placement.

The-CNN-Wire ™ & © 2015 Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company. All rights reserved. (PHOTO: CNN)

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