theguardian.com 
<https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2020/may/12/croatian-police-accused-of-shaving-and-spray-painting-heads-of-asylum-seekers>
  

Croatian police accused of spray-painting heads of asylum seekers

Lorenzo Tondo

6-8 minutes

  _____  

Croatian police are allegedly spray-painting the heads of asylum seekers with 
crosses when they attempt to cross the border from Bosnia.

The Guardian has obtained a number of photographs of what has been described by 
charities as the “latest humiliation’’ perpetrated by the Croatian authorities 
against migrants travelling along the Balkan route.

The UN has asked the Croatian government to investigate all the allegations of 
abuse.

“It is obvious that one of the intended effects of this behaviour is to 
humiliate refugees and migrants attempting to cross the border,” said Jack 
Sapoch from No Name Kitchen <https://www.nonamekitchen.org/en/>  (NNK), an NGO 
that operates in Velika Kladuša, 2km from the border, and is a member of 
watchdog organisation the Border Violence Monitoring Network 
<https://www.borderviolence.eu/> .

“As far as I see it, this is the result of either one of two motivations. 
Either the Croatian authorities committing these acts are using spray paint to 
identify and humiliate repeat border crossers or, more worryingly, they are 
using this as a tactic to psychologically traumatise these men – the majority 
of whom are Muslim – with a religious symbol,” Sapoch said.

On 6 May in Poljana, Bosnia, sources reported to the NNK that a group of people 
had been pushed back and sprayed with orange paint. The group had also had 
their money and mobile phones stolen; several had their shoes taken.

On 7 May, a different group returned to Miral camp outside Velika Kladuša 
describing similar treatment.

The Croatian police have been contacted for a comment. Previously, the 
authorities have stressed the need to protect their borders.

Every night groups of asylum seekers attempt to cross from Bosnia into Croatia, 
where squadrons of police await them at the border. Armed with truncheons, 
pistols and night vision goggles, they patrol the EU’s longest external border. 
Asylum seekers call crossing the border “the game,” but  
<https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2018/nov/14/didnt-give-a-damn-refugees-film-croatian-police-brutality-bosnia>
 it 
<https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2018/nov/14/didnt-give-a-damn-refugees-film-croatian-police-brutality-bosnia>
  is a dangerous undertaking.

Aid workers, doctors, border guards and UN officials have documented systematic 
abuse and violence perpetrated by police, with migrants often  
<https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2019/dec/22/blood-on-the-ground-at-croatia-borders-as-brutal-policing-persists>
 beaten, shot, robbed and even stripped of their clothes 
<https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2019/dec/22/blood-on-the-ground-at-croatia-borders-as-brutal-policing-persists>
 .



As well as being sprayed with paint, one group of migrants had their phones and 
money stolen; some also had their shoes taken. Photograph: Handout

The UN refugee agency, UNHCR, said it was ‘‘deeply concerned about reported 
violence and treatment of migrants and refugees by Croatian police’’.

‘‘Our organisation has previously received and subsequently shared with the 
authorities credible reports of people who claim they have been unlawfully 
returned from Croatia to Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia,” Zoran Stevanović, 
UNHCR regional communications officer for central Europe, told the Guardian.

“These reports highlight problems regarding the identification of asylum 
claims, violence and excessive use of force, identification of vulnerable 
individuals, treatment of unaccompanied children,” he said.

“UNHCR has requested the Croatian government to investigate all claims of 
violations and abuse and to establish an independent assessment mechanism to 
establish the facts of the border situation.’’

Between September 2019 and January this year, the UNHCR reported to the 
Croatian authorities 100 cases of alleged unlawful returns from Croatia to 
Bosnia and Serbia.

Despite this, Sapoch said that in the last two months his organisation has 
continued to receive reports of violence on the Bosnian border.

He added: “Hearing reports of increased brutality during pushbacks is worrying 
due to the increased autonomy that state authorities have gained during these 
times of the [coronavirus] pandemic. Now, more than ever, it is important for 
us to keep these forces accountable for their own actions.

“Pushbacks are illegal and the spread of Covid-19 is not an excuse to confront 
vulnerable people with even more violence. It is unacceptable.”

Last month, authorities in Bosnia ordered the transfer of thousands of migrants 
to a remote camp in Lipa 
<https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2020/mar/27/bosnia-crams-thousands-of-migrants-into-tent-camp-to-halt-covid-19-spread>
 , a village about 25km from the border with Croatia, due to the coronavirus 
outbreak in the country. The construction of the new camp prompted panic among 
asylum seekers and volunteers, who fear the measure will not guarantee any 
assistance to migrants.

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https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2020/may/12/croatian-police-accused-of-shaving-and-spray-painting-heads-of-asylum-seekers

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