The United Nations’ refugee agency on Friday criticized plans in Greece to build a fence along part of its border with Turkey, warning that asylum seekers could face greater difficulty escaping persecution and conflict.

The fence could lead illegal migrants, including people in need of international protection, to resort to even riskier routes with the help of unscrupulous human traffickers, it said.

Greece said on Monday it planned a fence at its border with Turkey in the Evros region to prevent a wave of immigrants flowing into the debt-choked country. Nine out of 10 illegal immigrants use Greece as their springboard into the European Union.

“While every state has the right to control its borders, it is clear that among the many people crossing Turkey toward the European Union, there are a significant number who are fleeing violence and persecution,” Melissa Fleming, spokeswoman for the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, told a news briefing.

“Building fences, we believe, rarely solves the underlying problem of migratory pressures,” she said.

Greece must establish border control mechanisms that provide concrete guarantees to people seeking international protection, according to the UNHCR.

Asylum seekers from Afghanistan form the biggest group entering Greece, followed by those from Somalia, Iraq and Eritrea.

Jean-Philippe Chauzy of the International Organisation for Migration echoed the concerns.

“What we’ve seen in all parts of the world is when a wall is being built to seal a border, smuggling networks basically take migrants and asylum-seekers on increasingly dangerous routes. Obviously there is a human cost.”

Greece’s land border with non-EU Turkey is more than 200 km (125 miles) long and mostly runs along a river. The fence will be built in the area where most migrants arrive, officials say.

“That route is already dangerous. In fact there are large numbers of migrants and people seeking asylum, potentially, who are drowning en route at the hands of notorious smugglers. So we're concerned that this could get even worse,” Fleming said.

The problem is compounded by Greece’s asylum system which UNHCR qualifies as “dysfunctional”.

Greek parliamentarians are currently debating legislation which is expected to pass into  law next week creating an independent authority examining asylum requests and an independent service to oversee detention centres.

Source: AP, Reuters