EU tests new screening process on refugee-hit Greek island
By Associated Press | November 3, 2015, 6:33 EST
LESBOS, Greece (AP) — A garbage-strewn hillside on this Greek island has become the European Union’s testing ground for a new fast-track registration process for migrants. If it works, authorities plan rapid expansion to other refugee “hotspots” struggling to cope with the influx of hundreds of thousands of people fleeing war and poverty.
Thousands are camping out here in a tent city that has sprung up around the police registration center chosen for the pilot program, which includes translators and police interviewers who use a secret questionnaire aimed at helping to quickly determine the migrants’ country of origin.
The EU chose to launch the program on Lesbos, because it is on the front-line of Europe’s migrant crisis. The island has been stretched to the limit with more than 300,000 migrants processed here this year, more than three times the island’s population — and most have landed in the past six weeks. Germany said Monday it expects other fast-track registration centers at migrant hotspots to begin functioning by the end of the month.
Francisco Ramos, a soft-spoken Spanish policeman, is