Fights among migrants on Greek island as Turkey rescues 330 Syrians

1Tensions rise: Syrian refugees clash during registration on Kos.
2Greek police used fire extinguishers and batons against migrants as fights broke out on Tuesday on the island of Kos, where overwhelmed authorities are struggling to contain increasing numbers of migrants.
3This situation on the island is out of control ... blood will be shed.
4Hundreds of protesting migrants demanding quick registration blocked the main coastal road in the island's main town, staging a sit-in.
5Syrian refugees rush to shore on Kos.
6"We want papers, we want to eat!" they chanted.
7Authorities, locals and charity groups struggled to provide registration, food and shelter to the new arrivals, many of whom are children.
8Many of those on Kos, a popular tourist destination, had been camping in the main town's parks and squares.
9Syrian refugees push to get registered on the Greek island of Kos.
10An attempt to have them relocated to a stadium for registration degenerated, with fights breaking out among some of the roughly 1500 people gathered in a long, crowded queue in the stadium.
11Police, who had a force of just a handful of officers to maintain control and carry out the registration, tried to impose order on the crowd by spraying the jostling migrants with fire extinguishers and using batons.
12Hundreds fled in panic.
13Kos mayor Yorgos Kyritsis said strained local services, including the police and coast guard were unable to cope with the influx.
14"This situation on the island is out of control," he told Greek TV.
15"There is a real danger of uncontrollable situations. Blood will be shed."
16Similar protests and tension have occurred on several of the islands bearing the brunt of the migrant influx in recent weeks, including Lesbos, where the majority of new arrivals land.
17The United Nations refugee agency called conditions for migrants on the Greek islands "shameful".
18Meanwhile, the Turkish coastguard rescued 330 Syrians adrift in the Aegean Sea on Tuesday after failing to reach Greece.
19Members of the group said they had been travelling on eight small boats.
20They included dozens of children, at least five of them newborn, and women, some of whom were pregnant.
21"We are told Europe will welcome us, but the door is closed in our face," said Abdul, 23, from Damascus.
22"We will try again every day to reach Greece."
23Several of the refugees said their boat had been stopped by armed Greek coastguard officers who ordered them to dump fuel, stranding them at sea.
24A spokesman for the Greek coastguard, Nikolaos Lagadianos, said it "categorically denied" the allegations, saying an incident had taken place off the Turkish town of Bodrum, further south, but that the Greek authorities had not been involved.
25Crisis-hit Greece has seen a dramatic rise in the number of people seeking refuge.
26The UN refugee agency said 124,000 have arrived this year by sea.
27Most are travelling to Greek islands in the Aegean Sea from the nearby Turkish mainland.
28Turkey is home to more than 1.8 million Syrian refugees escaping the four-year-old civil war.
29One Turkish coastguard officer in the seaside resort town of Cesme said his crew rescued 700 people in the past week, which he said was a record.
30"There has been a calamitous increase, and we do not have the resources to meet their needs," the officer said, declining to be named because he is not authorised to speak to the media.
31Most are refugees from war-torn Syria, but others fleeing hardship and violence in Afghanistan, Iraq and Iran are also filling up the inflatable boats run by Turkish smugglers.
32Last week, an estimated 200 migrants drowned after their boat capsized off the coast of Libya.
33More than 370 were rescued, but the boat was thought to have carried up to 600 people.