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Thanos Plevris, Minister of Migration & Asylum (Greece) // Hans Leijtens, Executive Director, Frontex // Magnus Brunner, European Commissioner for Migration and Home Affairs
Every day, people on the move risk their lives to reach safety in Europe. Under international law, they have the right to seek asylum, to be protected from return to danger, and to be treated with dignity and respect.
Nevertheless, at the EU’s external borders there is mounting evidence of systematic violations: illegal pushbacks at land and sea borders. These practices violate international and European law, endanger lives and undermine Europe’s own commitment to human rights and the rule of law!
We therefore demand a border and asylum system that upholds human dignity and accountability.
We call upon the Greek authorities (particularly the Ministry of Migration & Asylum), Frontex (the Executive Director) and the European Commission (Commissioner for Migration and Home Affairs) to act - transparently, urgently, and in full compliance with human rights obligations.
Our Demands:
- End illegal pushbacks, especially those involving Greek authorities and Frontex operations at the EU external borders!
- Create an independent international monitoring body, with unrestricted access to border operations and Coast guards’ reports, with the authority to publish findings, and recommend sanctions when rights are violated.
- Full transparency and accountability from Frontex! Frontex must make its operations public, cooperate fully with independent investigations, and guarantee that all missions respect the right to claim asylum and do not facilitate illegal returns.
이유
Why this matters:
The Pylos shipwreck in June 2023, where a boat carrying up to 750 people capsized off the coast of Greece, was one of the deadliest Mediterranean shipwrecks ever recorded and shows how border operations can cost hundreds of lives. [1] Investigations raised serious concerns about the role of the Greek Coast Guard, including possible delays and failures in carrying out rescue efforts [1] - leading in May 2025 to criminal proceedings for felonies against multiple Coast Guard officials for their alleged actions. [2]
Human rights organisations have repeatedly reported serious abuse against people on the move in the Aegean Sea and along the Turkish-Greek land border. [3] Testimonies describe how boats carrying people seeking safety were attacked or violently pushed back by masked men operating with Greek Coast Guard vessels, leaving many at risk of drowning and despair. [3]
There are widespread reports of extreme violence and abuse at the borders by Greek authorities - including physical assaults, sexual violence, forced stripping, theft, and cases of drowning or death. [4]
Despite most pushbacks taking place in secret, Aegean Boat Report records show that between January 2025 and November 2025, 180 boats carrying about 5,193 people were pushed back from Greek islands into Turkish waters. [5]
Despite growing evidence, Greek authorities deny accusations of illegal pushbacks, claiming their border operations comply with international and EU law. However, in January 2025, the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) found that Greece systematically returned migrants without individual assessment, violating key principles of the European human rights framework. [6] The European Union is under growing criticism for tolerating illegal pushbacks by Greek authorities - with its border agency Frontex involved. Between 2020 and 2023, Forensic Architecture documented Frontex’s direct involvement in 122 pushbacks and its awareness of more than 400 additional incidents. [7]
Push-backs are a tool of deterrence and externalisation - policies designed not to protect those in need, but to keep them out.
As fourth-semester students in the Master’s Programme in International Social Work with Refugees and Migrants at THWS in Germany, we stand in solidarity with people on the move. Our position is shaped by the profoundly disturbing testimonies we gathered during our summer school in Mytilene, Greece and Izmir, Turkey, where interviews with people on the move revealed systemic violations of fundamental human rights
Sign and share this petition NOW - to hold those responsible accountable for the lives lost at sea, and to stand up for the future of Europe’s promise of justice and dignity!
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[1] https://forensic-architecture.org/investigation/the-pylos-shipwreck
[2] https://rsaegean.org/en/pylos-shipwreck-criminal-prosecution-for-felonies-to-17-members-of-the-coast-guard/
[3] https://rsaegean.org/en/push-backs/
[4] https://www.statewatch.org/news/2025/august/greece-illegal-violent-deportations-the-heavy-toll-of-seeking-asylum-in-europe/
[5] https://lookerstudio.google.com/u/0/reporting/1CiKR1_R7-1UbMHKhzZe_Ji_cvqF7xlfH/page/A5Q0
[6] https://www.ecchr.eu/en/case/greece-before-the-european-court-of-human-rights/
[7] https://forensic-architecture.org/investigation/drift-backs-in-the-aegean-sea
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