The Christian Science Monitor / Text

Only 70 people lived on the island of Gavdos. Then migrant boats started to arrive.

Most migrants crossing the Mediterranean to Europe have arrived in populated areas that could handle newcomers. But what happens when they land someplace truly isolated like the island of Gavdos?

By Nick Squires Contributor
Gavdos, Greece

A tawny smudge on the blue horizon of the Mediterranean, it is the southernmost point of Europe, a sun-baked outpost of deserted beaches, gnarled juniper trees, and flocks of shaggy goats.

The tiny Greek island of Gavdos, which lies to the south of Crete, has until now been distinguished as the place where Odysseus was shipwrecked and held captive by the nymph Calypso, and as a destination for sun-seekers during the summer holidays.

Now, however, the island finds itself thrust to the forefront of Europe’s migration crisis, which erupted in 2015 when more than 1 million asylum-seekers reached the Continent.

Since the beginning of the year, around 1,200 migrants have arrived on Gavdos by boat, with most of them setting out from Tobruk on the coast of Libya. In the same period last year, there were no arrivals at all.

The numbers may be modest, at least compared with the tens of thousands who arrive each year in neighboring Italy, but the impact on such a small island is huge. The population of Gavdos is just 70 – on one occasion recently, islanders were outnumbered by the 91 migrants who arrived on a single boat from the Libyan coast.

Most of the arrivals are economic migrants from Egypt. They are fleeing poverty and political tensions. There is a smattering of other nationalities, including Pakistanis, Bangladeshis, Syrians, and Sudanese.

It is an influx that Gavdos is totally unprepared for. There are no facilities for the migrants – no reception center, no soup kitchen, no nongovernmental organizations. Unlike Greek islands in the Aegean such as Lesbos and Samos, which have been dealing with migrant arrivals from nearby Turkey for years, there are no personnel from charities such as the Red Cross or Doctors Without Borders.

“A very small island with very few people”

The task of dealing with the migrants is left to just three men – the deputy mayor, his twin brother, and the island’s sole police officer.

“It’s a crisis. Gavdos is a very small island with very few people,” says Lefteris Lougiakis, the deputy mayor. “We have the responsibility of providing them with shelter and food. During the winter, we cut wood to keep them warm. It’s a very difficult situation.”

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Islanders do what they can to care for the migrants and many feel empathy for them.

“They travel for 20 hours in very small boats with no life jackets. It’s just by luck that we are not in their position. I feel sorry for them,” says Stella Stefanaki, who runs a small bakery on the island. She provides sandwiches for the new arrivals, for which she is reimbursed by the council.

Islanders may be sympathetic, but they want the migrant arrivals to stop as soon as possible, especially as the summer tourist season approaches.

“People are worried,” says Yorgos Lougiakis, the brother of the deputy mayor. “If tourists hear about the migrants, they will be scared to come to Gavdos.”

The migrants have to cross 170 nautical miles of open sea to reach the island from North Africa. It is highly dangerous, but that has not stopped smugglers from promoting it as an effective way of getting into Europe by the back door. Each migrant pays up to $5,000 for the crossing.

The inhabitants of Gavdos, which covers barely 11 square miles, fear their unique way of life is under threat.

The “capital” of the island is the village of Kastri, a cluster of about a dozen houses on a ridge. The other main settlement, Sarakiniko, consists of a few cottages and tavernas hidden among sand dunes and facing a huge sweep of beach.

There are just four children living on the island. Three of them belong to Efi Georgaka, who sells honey; keeps sheep, pigs, and goats; and, during the summer, works in the ferry ticket office in the island’s minuscule harbor.

“If things keep going like this then the island will change,” she says, sitting on the harbor wall. “There will be a need for police and coast guard officers and the navy, like on other Greek islands. We don’t want them [the authorities] here. We treasure the freedom and tranquillity that we have,” says Ms. Georgaka, who has lived on the island for 16 years.

Help on the way?

Gavdos has emerged as a new migrant destination because of pressures elsewhere: a crackdown on migrant boats by Greek authorities and the EU border agency Frontex in the Aegean, twinned with the hard-line policies pursued in Italy by Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, who has staked much political capital on stopping the boats coming from North Africa.

Earlier this month, Greece’s government promised to provide money and personnel to help Gavdos and its much larger neighbor, Crete, deal with the dramatic rise in migrant arrivals.

“Crete will not be left alone, and even more so Gavdos,” said Dimitris Kairidis, the migration minister, after paying a visit to both islands. “We are here to help the local community. The resources and the means are there.”

For the people of Gavdos, help cannot come quickly enough. The approaching summer months will bring warmer weather and calmer seas, which could encourage more migrant crossings from Libya.

“It is easy for them to come here because out at sea there is no navy, no coast guard, no Frontex to stop them,” says Mr. Lougiakis, the deputy mayor. “We hear that there are thousands of migrants in Libya, waiting to cross. I think there will be many more boats this summer. People on the island are worried that we are going to be overrun.”