Migrants among six killed in car crash near Greece-Turkey border

A car carrying 10 migrants was travelling at a high speed on the wrong side of a highway to avoid a police checkpoint and slammed into a four-wheel drive, Greek police said.
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Greece is looking for financial aid to help extend an anti-migrant steel fence along the border with Turkey [Sakis Mitrolidis/AFP via Getty]

Five migrants and a Greek motorist were killed in a car crash on a highway near the border between Greece and Turkey on Saturday, police told AFP.

The car, carrying 10 migrants, was travelling at a high speed on the wrong side to avoid a police checkpoint and slammed into a four-wheel drive, the 46-year-old driver of which was also killed, the police said.

The other five migrants - whose nationalities were not immediately clear - and the driver of their vehicle were taken to hospital after sustaining injuries, the police added.

Thousands of migrants have in recent years transited into Greece from Turkey in the hope of making it to western Europe.

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With the stepping up of patrols in the Aegean Sea making it harder for migrants to reach Greek islands more are taking their chances by crossing the River Evros, a natural mainland border, and having traffickers take them from there by road.

Recently there have been an increasing number of accidents similar to Saturday's.

NGOs have meanwhile been accusing Greece of illegal pushbacks - which Athens denies - of asylum seekers who make it across the river.

In an effort to reduce the flow of migrants, conservative Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis two weeks ago called on the European Union to "seriously consider" providing financial aid to help extend an anti-migrant steel fence along the border with Turkey.

Athens has decided to extend by 35 kilometres (22 miles) a five-metre high steel fence which runs along the river.

The fence is currently 38 kilometres long, and Athens aims to carry out the extension within a year, adding a total of 100 kilometres by 2026.