Greeks rescue 68 at Turkish border

THESSALONIKI, Greece — Greek border police said Friday that they had rescued 68 people, most of them Syrians, trying to cross illegally into Greece after they became stranded on a berm on the Greek-Turkish border.

The foreigners, including 14 children and seven women, were stranded after crossing the Evros river dividing the two countries and finding the fields on the Greek side severely flooded after days of heavy rainfall. The group was located before dawn Friday after one of them called Greek emergency services.

Border police used inflatable dinghies to reach the people, who authorities said had been abandoned by the smuggler facilitating their journey. Police said they later told authorities a smuggler had put them into 10 inflatable dinghies on the Turkish side of the river, and the current carried them to the berm, located in a bend on the river.

The people were taken to a nearby holding center and given clothes, food and shoes, authorities said.

Greece is on the main route used by people attempting to enter the European Union. Tens of thousands enter the country each year, and many perish along the way, mostly when their rickety boats sink while attempting the sea crossing from Turkey to the nearby Greek islands.

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