A
police statement says officers fired tear gas at detainees alleged to
have thrown roof-tiles at them. It also said detainees set fire to
buildings in the complex outside the town of Corinth.
Police arrested 47 Afghans suspected of taking part in the clashes.
Immigrant
rights groups, including the Movement United Against Racism and the
Fascist Threat, claimed the trouble on the fringes of Corinth started
after police beat up a detainee who had refused food to protest the
extension of his detention. In a joint statement, the groups, among them
one representing the Pakistani community, also said the fires were
started by tear gas canisters fired by police.
More
than 5,000 people are held in similar complexes across Greece, and
rights groups say hundreds are refusing to eat in reaction to the
prolongation of their detention, which under Greek law can reach a
maximum 18 months. Human rights groups have repeatedly criticized the
detention conditions.
The unchecked wave of
illegal immigration in recent years, which coincided with a spike in
crime, contributed to the meteoric rise of a once-marginal extreme
right-wing party with neo-Nazi leanings that entered Parliament last
year.
The Golden Dawn party, whose supporters
have repeatedly been linked with violent attacks on immigrants, is
currently Greece's third most popular, polling at around 10 percent.
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