This is a conversation with Syrian-British human rights activist Ghias Al Jundi about the recent fires at the Moria camp for refugees and migrants in Greece. The fires that burned through the camp left thousands houseless, turning a situation that was already described as a living hell into something even worse. Please check the links below for readings on that.
Ghias has been going frequently to Greece to help refugees who make the dangerous journey across the Mediterranean Sea, a reality that is the result of the European Union's decision to demonise migration and asylum. The EU has made it impossible for refugees to reach Fortress Europe via the land.
[For more on that you can listen to episode 35 (July 6, 2020) on the deadly 'Balkan Route', with Jack Sapoch, coordinator of No Name Kitchen‘s border violence reporting, itself part of the Border Violence Monitoring Network (BVMN).]
He also knows very well what it means to leave one's home as he himself fled Syria in 1998 after surviving torture in Hafez Assad's dungeons. This direct connection is something that I think is reflected in our own conversation. As he told me in the episode, seeing migrants and refugees try and reach Europe's shores felt like Syria was coming to him this time.
If you'd like to support Ghias' fundraising effort to help those displaced by the Moria fires, you can do so at this link.
As for articles related to the Moria fires, you'll find them on the associated blogpost on thefirethisti.me
49/The Moria Camp and Fortress Europe's Deadly Xenophobia (with Ghias Al Jundi)