Serbian police round up hundreds of migrants in north and southeast 

Serbian police round up hundreds of migrants in north and southeast 
A Serbian border police officer and members of European Border and Coast Guard Agency Frontex patrol on the Bulgaria-Serbia border, near the Serbian border village of Gradina, on February 17, 2023. (AFP/File)
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Updated 03 November 2023
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Serbian police round up hundreds of migrants in north and southeast 

Serbian police round up hundreds of migrants in north and southeast 
  • Most of those using the Balkan route into EU come from the Middle East, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Africa 
  • Many migrants cross borders through the route that runs via Turkiye, Bulgaria, North Macedonia and Serbia 

BELGRADE: Serbian police have rounded up a total of 738 migrants in several raids in northern and eastern areas of the Balkan country, part of a nationwide operation launched last week after a shootout in which three migrants died. 

In a statement late on Thursday, the police said they had rounded up migrants in the municipalities of Subotica, Sombor and Kikinda near the Hungarian border in the north and near the town of Pirot in the southeast, near the border with Bulgaria. 

Last week three migrants died in a shootout near Serbia’s border with Hungary, a route increasingly used by people smugglers for entering the European Union. 

The police said they had searched more than 5,000 cars and 32 homes and had uncovered passports and other personal documents. So far they have rounded up hundreds of migrants and arrested dozens. 

“In the coming days, police will step up measures and engage forces ... to suppress illegal migration,” the statement said. 

It did not say where the migrants had come from but most of those using the Balkan route into the EU come from the Middle East, Afghanistan, Pakistan and north Africa. The route runs via Turkiye, Bulgaria, North Macedonia and Serbia. 

Many migrants are crossing borders with the help of elaborate networks of smugglers who are sometimes armed, and shootouts between criminal groups are frequent. 

Serbia conducts joint border patrols with EU members Hungary and Austria. Belgrade has pledged to align its visa policies with those of the EU to help stem the flow of illegal migrants westward.