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Publish date: Saturday 10 December 2022
view count : 110
create date : Saturday, December 10, 2022 | 3:10 PM
publish date : Saturday, December 10, 2022 | 3:07 PM
update date : Saturday, December 10, 2022 | 3:10 PM

Afghan refugee freed in Greece after two years of wrongful imprisonment

  • Afghan refugee freed in Greece after two years of wrongful imprisonment
Campaigners hope overturning of Akif Rasuli’s 50-year sentence will be ‘first victory’ for criminalised migrants in Greek jails.
An imprisoned Afghan refugee wrongfully accused of smuggling people into Greece has been told he can walk free in a trial that activists hope will set a precedent for thousands of others in similar situations.

After a marathon day of proceedings, an appeals court sitting on the Aegean island of Lesbos ruled that Akif Rasuli could be released more than two years after he began serving a 50-year sentence for the crime of “facilitating the illegal entry” of undocumented migrants into the country. The three-member tribunal overturned the conviction citing lack of evidence.

“I always said I was innocent and they finally believed me,” an emotional Rasuli said after the verdict late Thursday. “I am very happy, very but right now my thoughts are with all the others, so many people like me, who are also in prison in Greece.”

Amir Zahiri, an Afghan also serving a 50-year jail term for the same offence, who had sat handcuffed to Rasuli at the back of the court for nearly seven hours before being called to the bench, saw his sentence reduced to eight years although he, too, is expected to be allowed to walk free imminently.

The men, both in their 20s, had been on the same vessel when it was abandoned by smugglers in September 2020 as it crossed the Aegean from Turkey. Amir, however, had been travelling with his young daughter and heavily pregnant wife.
Amir Zahiri and Akif Razuli being led under police escort into the appeals court on Lesbos. Picture by Helena Smith/ The Guardian
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MEPS and human rights lawyers who had flown in to Lesbos to attend the hearing described the verdicts as a “first victory” in the battle to address the plight of asylum seekers being falsely accused of human smuggling. Fair trial concerns have increasingly been voiced.

“We will be raising this case as an example of what is happening to thousands of other innocent migrants cruelly languishing in prison,” said Clare Daly, an Irish MEP with the Independents 4 Change party. “And we will use it to highlight the ludicrous situation that is prevailing in Greece as a result of the manner in which the EU Facilitators package [of directives] is being enacted.”

Although the legislation had been drafted to deal with “the insidious practice of smuggling”, in Greece, Daly said, it was frequently misinterpreted by law enforcers randomly singling out migrant “offenders” on boats deserted by real smugglers.

“This ambiguity, long highlighted by the European parliament, cannot continue. The [EU] commission cannot continue to stand idly by while Greece implements it in this way.”

The short but often perilous sea crossing from Turkey has long been a popular entry point into Europe for people fleeing war, poverty and persecution in Africa, Asia and the Middle East. In 2014, shortly before an estimated 870,000 Syrians landed on the Aegean isles en route to Europe, Athens sought to crack down on human smuggling rings along the Turkish coast with draconian legislation. People smugglers were handed unprecedentedly harsh sentences, with penalties ranging from 10 years for each smuggled person on board to life imprisonment if deaths occurred on the journey.

More than 20% of the Mediterranean nation’s prison population has either been convicted or charged with human smuggling, according to statistics recently published by the pro-government Kathimerini newspaper.

“If, like Amir, you admit even touching the helm of a boat, even if it’s abandoned by smugglers, the sentence is very tough,” said Alexandros Georgoulis, a lawyer who specialises in assisting refugees and had represented Zahiri. “It’s so unfair when all you have done is try to help your family and it is very probable that others [passengers not singled out] have been at the helm too. But the law, as it stands, is problematic and that is why our jails now are so full of these people.”

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