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  • A boarded up door and graffiti at the closed down refugee camp at the Port of Lakki. <br />
<br />
The camp was opened by volunteers in the summer of 2015 and later that year UNHCR and MSF expanded it and provided additional tents, toilets and other facilities. The camp was closed soon after the opening of a 'Hotspot' (EU-run migrant's reception centres) camp in Lepida in February 2016.
    06_160601_071.jpg
  • Refugee children swimming in the shallow waters of Gourna Beach. It is the first time they have been back to the sea since they were rescued by the coast guard after crossing from Turkey.
    67_160602_223.jpg
  • Kinaz looks at eight month pregnant Fadwa doing laundry in a bathroom at PIKPA, a refuge opened in January 2016 by the Leros Solidarity Network as a shelter for families and unaccompanied minors.
    58_160602_068.jpg
  • Syrian-Kurd refugee Shaaf Yunis, 57, pushing her one year old grandson, Leven Kendi, past a yachting marina.
    47_160603_244.jpg
  • Yazidi refugees Hazim Elias Khadeda 22  and his sister Leena Elias Khadeda  16 photographed in front of the abandoned building of the Royal Technical School of Leros.<br />
<br />
This building was built in the 1930 by Fascist Italy as barack for the submarine crews stationed in the island. After WWII it  was turned into a a reeducation camp for the children of Greek Communists and into a technical school. From the mid 1950’s until 1967 it was a technical school with boarding facilities. During the Colonel’s Junta in Greece it was turned into a camp for members of the communist party. After the Junta it was abandoned and now it’s about to collapse.
    45_160603_298.jpg
  • Shirin, Levent, Jamila, Wafa, Aya, Rania (L-R) refugees from Aleppo and Al Hasakah outside their hut in the First Reception Centre (Hot-Spot) of Leros, Greece. <br />
<br />
The Hot Spot in Lepida opened on the 26th of February 2016 in the grounds of the former Lepida psychiatric hospital.  At the beginning it served as a registration camp for refugees and migrants who were travelling to Europe through Greece but since the closure of the borders in March 2016 it serves as a permanent camp. People are allowed to go out, they have three meals a day, the prefabricated huts have a bathroom and are air-conditioned and compering to other refugee camps in Greece the conditions are bearable.
    34_160826_016.jpg
  • The double barbed wire fence surrounding the First Reception Centre (Hot-Spot) of Leros, Greece.<br />
<br />
The Hot Spot in Lepida opened on the 26th of February 2016 in the grounds of the former Lepida psychiatric hospital.  At the beginning it served as a registration camp for refugees and migrants who were travelling to Europe through Greece but since the closure of the borders in March 2016 it serves as a permanent camp. People are allowed to go out, they have three meals a day, the prefabricated huts have a bathroom and are air-conditioned and compering to other refugee camps in Greece the conditions are bearable.
    35_160826_075.jpg
  • A child's cot and toys in Villa Artemis, a shelter for 30 refugee women and their children in the grounds of Leros Hospital.<br />
<br />
Opened in September 2015, the shelter was run by the Leros Solidarity Network. However, Villa Artemis was closed down shortly after the opening of a 'Hotspot' (EU-run migrant's reception centres) camp in Lepida in February 2016.
    18_160601_128.jpg
  • Discarded UNHCR prayer mats in an abandoned building at a now-closed refugee camp at the port of Lakki.<br />
<br />
The camp was opened by volunteers in the summer of 2015 and later that year UNHCR and MSF expanded it and provided additional tents, toilets and other facilities. The camp was closed soon after the opening of a 'Hotspot' (EU-run migrant's reception centres) camp in Lepida in February 2016.
    11_160828_635.jpg
  • Admire the architecture of Symi. Symi Island, Dodecanese, Greece
    091005_162.jpg
  • Admire the architecture of Symi. Symi Island, Dodecanese, Greece
    091005_166.jpg
  • Admire the architecture of Symi. Symi Island, Dodecanese, Greece
    091005_157.jpg
  • Admire the architecture of Symi. Symi Island, Dodecanese, Greece
    091005_352.jpg
  • Admire the architecture of Symi. Symi Island, Dodecanese, Greece
    091005_165.jpg
  • Admire the architecture of Symi. Symi Island, Dodecanese, Greece
    091005_158.jpg
  • Admire the architecture of Symi. Symi Island, Dodecanese, Greece
    091005_155.jpg
  • Admire the architecture of Symi. Symi Island, Dodecanese, Greece
    091005_164.jpg
  • Admire the architecture of Symi. Symi Island, Dodecanese, Greece
    091005_160.jpg
  • Admire the architecture of Symi. Symi Island, Dodecanese, Greece
    091005_034.jpg
  • Admire the architecture of Symi. Symi Island, Dodecanese, Greece
    091005_288.jpg
  • Admire the architecture of Symi. Symi Island, Dodecanese, Greece
    091005_353.jpg
  • Admire the architecture of Symi. Symi Island, Dodecanese, Greece
    091005_351.jpg
  • Sharifa Khedr Qassem a 27 year old Yazidi from Siba Sheikh Khidir, northern Iraq.<br />
<br />
<br />
This is a series of portraits of Yazidi refugees who were stranded since April 2016 in Greece.  All of them survived the Yazidi Genocide by ISIS in August 2014 and most of them have lost family members.
    32_160907_064.jpg
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