The closure of the Calais WASH Centre

On 18th March 2024, the Collective Aid WASH Centre in Calais received a notice from the city, forcing it into administrative closure. Within an hour, services stopped and service users left the centre with no clear answer on when the centre would be able to reopen. This closure has resulted in yet another barrier to sanitation services for people on the move, something that France was already criticised for by United Nations human rights experts in their 2018 Universal Periodic Review, who urged France to “increase efforts” to provide these services. Despite completing all required modifications to the WASH Centre, it is still closed with no confirmed date for reopening.

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Collective Aid
Obrenovac Asylum Centre: A safe bed for a night or a starting point for a pushback?

During a visit to Obrenovac, our team were told by the people who remained outside the centre that the Comisserat and Serbian police had offered people the opportunity to sleep inside the centre for the night, only to detain them and push them back to Bulgaria the following morning. This is quite literally a form of entrapment and a manipulation of the vulnerability of the people on the move (POM), which the authorities are creating and adding to in the first place. The authorities would have done this, being completely aware of the severe needs of the POM, who had likely not not sufficiently rested for days, if not weeks.

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Collective Aid
“Why are you helping them? They [migrants] are coming here illegally.” A forever changing context for people on the move within Serbia.

Since the Special operation in Northern Serbia was conducted in October and November last year, the situation for people on the move has become increasingly more difficult and uncertain. As far as we can see, no informal settlements have reopened, the Reception Centre in Subotica remains closed, and only very few numbers of people are passing through the region.

The official line is clear, when our team was stopped recently by Serbian police and Frontex staff (German representatives) while conducting an assessment at a previous work site, they were asked “Why are you helping them, they [migrants] are coming here illegally?” 

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Collective Aid
The ongoing Impact of Serbia’s Special Operation

On January 30th, an advocacy team from Collective Aid met with three Afghan men, Amir, Ali and Basim, who described their attempt to cross the Serbia-Hungary border on the last day of 2023. They were with a group of six other men on the afternoon of December 31st when Hungarian police officers arrested them right after they crossed the border. The police illegally pushed them back over the border and brought them to Serbian police officers who were accompanied by Italian officers with the EU logo on their uniforms. After having talked to Amir, the only one of the group who spoke English, Serbian police officers started to beat him in front of everyone. The group was then forcefully put into a van and driven to a police station in Subotica where they stayed the whole night without any food or water. In the morning, police officers took them to court where they were forced to sign papers without being told what they were signing. A translator, who only spoke Turkish, told them that they would go to a refugee camp to rest for a few days.

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Collective Aid
No Name Migrant: The Forbidden Cemetery of Subotica

One of the few Arabic signs in Northern Serbia greets you when you enter the Sencansko groblje (cemetery) in Subotica reads: “Forbidden to enter the cemetery and church.” In the corner of this cemetery sits two graves. At the front, the grave is marked “NN Migrant 2023”. At the back, it is marked “N. N. 2022”. These are just two of 1015 unmarked graves across Europe. In Subotica, two people on the move have met their untimely fate on their journey into the European Union. What we do not know of them; their names, families, friends, hopes, dreams, likes, dislikes, we can be sure that they were crossing Europe’s borders in search of safety. From Spain and Italy to Greece, France and Croatia, people on the move are met with the most lethal force of the EU’s border regime: death.


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Collective Aid
Conditions in Calais: Desperation, deaths and police brutality

Life in Calais for people on the move is a near-constant battle against police harassment and violence, and the message from the French government has never been clearer; violence from the state is not only tolerated, it is rewarded. As temperatures dropped below zero in late November, France’s notorious riot police, the Compagnie Républicaine de Sécurité (CRS), and border police, the Police aux Frontières (PAF), geared up for an eviction more devastating than usual.


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Collective Aid
Everyday Violence at Europe’s External Borders: Violence and Inhumane Treatment as Part of Daily Life for People on the Move

On the morning of October 20th, Khaled was jolted awake by loud shouts and screams from outside the dimly lit room he was sleeping in.  The other men and boys sharing the room at the temporary living site near the Hungarian border began to get up to investigate the noise.  Suddenly, the door was smashed open, revealing three masked men dressed all in black and brandishing batons. 

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Collective Aid
Special Operation in Northern Serbia

In the last few weeks, the situation for people on the move in Northern Serbia has become increasingly difficult and tenuous.  On October 28th, the Serbian Minister of the Interior Bratislav Gašić held a press conference announcing a sweeping military and policing campaign focusing on Northern Serbia. This special operation joins together police units from Serbia and Hungary, and includes the involvement of heavily armed Serbian Gendarmerie special military units.  During the press conference, Gašić stated that the special operation will not stop “until the last perpetrator of any criminal act, causing any incidents, shootings and everything, is removed from the territory of Subotica, Kikinda, and Sombor.”

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Collective Aid
“I want to have a better future.” Moments of Connection near the Serbian Border

Tucked away in the back corner of an informal living site in Northern Serbia, a time honored tradition takes place.  A small barbershop has been set up under the shade of a tree, complete with a dedicated wooden seat and a small table where electric razors, scissors and small combs are carefully laid out.  A group of men sit nearby, sipping sugary tea brought by Collective Aid volunteers and await their turn to be called for the next haircut slot. 

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Collective Aid
Policing Water: France’s dangerous deterrence methods harm refugees

Seeking asylum is a universal human right. But for years, European countries have pursued harsh policies designed to deter people from exercising this right. Governments refuse the duty of search and rescue along dangerous sea routes. Detention of asylum seekers is common practice, often for long periods and in poor conditions. And people on the move face police aggression and constant pushbacks— measures to force refugees back across borders to avoid responsibility for their asylum claims. 

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Collective Aid
Bulgaria by foot: Experiences of the Balkan Route

In Belgrade, Collective Aid volunteers often meet individuals arriving in Serbia for the first time after long journeys through Turkey and Bulgaria. This was the case for Sayeed*, a 26-year-old graduate of mechanical engineering. Sayeed comes from Afghanistan, having fled after the Taliban’s takeover in 2021.

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“We are Serbian police, we do what we want”

In recent weeks, Collective Aid has witnessed regular taxi stop-and-searches. These often take place on the outskirts of Subotica on the way to the Serbian-Hungarian border and living sites. They even occur at the entrance of Subotica’s reception centre. We have received reports recently that people on the move are being stolen from taxis by the Serbian police conducting these stop-and-searches.

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EU funding for Serbian reception centres veiled by secrecy

“In camp, they feed us pork… do they not know we are Muslims?” 

Ahmed*, a Moroccan in his early twenties, asked me this outside Collective Aid’s WASH centre in Belgrade. The centre is a unique spot in the city for people on the move, where we offer laundry services and hot showers for free to those passing through Serbia’s capital. It was not the first time I was asked a question like this, nor was it the first time I was stumped for an answer.

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Winter at the Hungarian-Serbian border

There were only about 20 people this time, all men and one 9 year old boy, Aamir. His uncle told us how they walked 20 km in sandals until 1 am, how he was arrested by Hungarian police and held in jail for two days with no food before being dropped back over the border.

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Collective Aid
Volunteer Blog - Zoë

I’ve spent the last 2 months or so volunteering with Collective Aid in Sarajevo. Although I'd been keeping up to date with the migrant crisis, before I arrived here I didn't know quite the extent of the issues here in Bosnia

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Collective Aid