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Explainer: The Dangers Of The Balkans' Migrant Route


Predrag Zvijerac

5–6 minutes

  _____  

Gazing across the green waters of the Drina, it appears as if you could step 
over the river without getting your shirt wet.

Appearances can be deceptive, however. After a boat carrying migrants capsized 
during the night of August 21-22, 11 people have been reported dead attempting 
to cross the river from Serbia to Bosnia-Herzegovina.

Ivica Dacic, the interior minister of Serbia, announced on August 22 that 
rescuers had found 18 people alive, including three children, who had made it 
to the riverbank. The tragedy occurred near the village of Tegara in eastern 
Bosnia.

Many others have suffered a similar fate. Around 60 migrants, many whose names, 
nationalities, and religions remain unknown, have been buried in cemeteries on 
the Bosnian side of the river. It's likely the perilous waters have claimed 
even more lives than reported.

According to official data from the UN's International Organization for 
Migration, in 2023, 45 people -- often fleeing poverty and war -- died on the 
long and arduous journey from Africa and Asia through the Balkans to Western 
Europe.

The so-called Balkan route came to prominence in 2015, when more than 760,000 
migrants and refugees passed through the western Balkans on their way to the 
European Union. Most of those refugees came from war-torn Syria, according to 
official data from the European border and coast guard agency, Frontex.

Typically, desperate migrants travel by sea or land from Turkey to Greece, and 
then make their way through North Macedonia and Serbia, before trying to enter 
the European Union through Hungary, Croatia, or Slovenia. Others go through 
Bulgaria instead of Greece.

An official from Bosnia's Security Ministry, which enforces the country's 
immigration and asylum policies, told RFE/RL's Balkan Service that migrants 
traveling along the Balkan route have two main options. (The official was 
speaking on the condition of anonymity, as he is not authorized to speak to the 
media.)

Paying Traffickers

One option was to pay human traffickers in Turkey between 100 euros ($112) and 
400 euros ($448) to receive specific GPS coordinates for routes to Bulgaria. 
According to the official, they then paid a similar amount in Bulgaria for 
coordinates leading to Serbia, and then again in Serbia for a route to Bosnia. 
The process continues until they reach EU member Croatia.

The second option, according to the Bosnian official, is for migrants to pay 
around 10,000 euros ($11,195) for a more comprehensive service. This includes 
an escort provided by human traffickers who take them to each border before 
handing them over to a new guide on the other side. Local drivers frequently 
transport them on small, rural roads.

For people smugglers, Bosnia is a preferred route due to its relatively porous 
borders and a shortage of border guards. In 2023, 162 people were charged with 
human trafficking in Bosnia. Most of the accused are Bosnian, as well as some 
citizens of Germany, Spain, and Turkey.

In the future, Bosnia's borders could become even more porous, as nearly a 
third of the approximately 1,800 border police officers in the country are set 
to retire within the next three years.

Although the EU has offered help, officers from the European border and coast 
guard agency Frontex have not been deployed to Bosnia, partly due to the 
constant political disagreements in the ethnically divided state.

The numbers of migrants traveling along the Balkan route have substantially 
decreased from their peak in 2015, largely due to tightened border security, 
changes in migration trends, and better cooperation between EU and non-EU 
countries.

According to data from the Serbian Commissariat for Refugees and Migration, 
more than 107,000 migrants passed through Serbia in 2023. Their average length 
of stay in Serbia was 12 days, according to the commissariat.

In 2023, the Bosnian Security Ministry recorded around 34,400 migrants passing 
through the country. And so far this year, 16,778 migrants were registered up 
to August 18. Among them, there were around 14,400 Afghans, 7,100 Moroccans, 
2,500 Syrians, and around 1,000 people each from Pakistan, Turkey, Bangladesh, 
and Iran.

Few stay in Bosnia for extended periods of time, with the migrants preferring 
to make their way to the EU, where work opportunities are thought to be better. 
Migrants predominantly cross borders during the warmer months, with many 
spending the winter in four reception centers across Bosnia, which offer around 
4,000 beds.

Official data from Bosnia indicates that less than 1 percent of migrants apply 
for asylum, with an average of about 150 applications per year. Of those 
applications, only around 10 percent are approved.

In addition to the risks posed by the environment and terrain, border patrol 
officers and police frequently beat and pursue migrants across the Balkans. On 
Bosnia's border with Croatia, many migrants have alleged that Croatian police 
have beaten them and confiscated their money, mobile phones, and other 
belongings -- claims the Croatian authorities reject.

 

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