Greece clears migrants' tent city in Athens park, but many are wary of resettlement move

1ATHENS, Greece - Greek authorities said Sunday they have started resettling migrants living in tents in a park in Athens, but many were wary and had moved out ahead of the operation.
2Fire brigade buses moved the migrants, most from Afghanistan, to a settlement of 90 containers in the Athens district of Votanikos.
3Each can house six to eight people and has air conditioning, running water and a toilet.
4The government has said it is not a detention center and everyone is free to come and go.
5However, police estimated that about a third of the park's almost 300 tent residents, wary of such promises, packed their belongings and left earlier.
6Another 30 have refused to budge.
7Police say a total of 171 were resettled Sunday, but many more live in other public spaces.
8More than 130,000 migrants have reached Greece so far in 2015, straining the country's resources.
9"I am afraid that they are going to send us back to Afghanistan, I'm scared of being sent to a fenced place where I won't be able to go anywhere," said Zahra Mohseni, an Afghan migrant.
10Syrian refugees wait to board a ship that Greek authorities sent to house them and process their papers, on the island of Kos in Greece, Aug. 16, 2015.
11Greek authorities have sped up processing of migration documents so that refugees and migrants can leave the island faster.
12Others found the new settlement a welcome change from the park.
13"It is so much better. The people who walk into their rooms are very pleased. There is a happy atmosphere, everything is beautiful and there are special places for little children to play or hang around, like small parks," said Arash Himati, another Afghan migrant.
14The settlement is far from other residences, but some feared that locals in Votanikos would object to the migrants in their midst, and the Greek media have played up the "locals protest" angle.
15About a dozen people turned up to protest and were kept at bay by police.