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Europe refugee crisis: Thousands rush into Croatia as police open bottleneck

Thousands of people trying to reach the heart of Europe surged across Serbia's border into Croatia as police ended a two-day bottleneck Monday that had reduced many to mud-caked misery.

More than 3,000 refugees allowed into country on way to heart of Europe

Thousands of people trying to reach the heart of Europe surged across Serbia's border into Croatia as police ended a two-day bottleneck Monday that had reduced many to mud-caked misery.

The surprise move allowed an estimated 3,000 more refugees to travel into Croatia bound for Slovenia, the next agonizing obstacle looming on the West Balkans route that currently serves as asylum seekers' main eastern entrance to the European Union.

Slovenia, which also has been struggling to slow the flow of humanity across its frontiers, faced another evening wave of trekkers seeking to cross the small Alpine country and reach Austria and Germany to the north.

"Without any announcement, the borders opened. When the borders opened, everybody rushed," said Melita Sunjic, a spokeswoman for the United Nations refugee agency positioned on the Serb-Croat border. "The last person to go was a young boy without a leg, and we helped him cross in a wheelchair."

Aid officials at the border distributed blue rain ponchos and bags of food to bedraggled travellers, many of them slipping in ankle-deep mud and chilled to the bone. Beyond stood about a dozen police, who had removed road barricades to permit people to walk down the rural lane. Officials on the Croat side planned to bus the newcomers either to a Croat refugee camp or more likely given asylum seekers' reluctance to stop before reaching their desired destinations to the Slovenian border.

Slovenia next challenge

Slovenia's Interior Ministry said that some 5,000 refugees reached the border Monday at various entry points, and most were allowed to enter, with at least 900 reaching Austria by the evening. Slovenia had vowed to take no more than 2,500 per day.

Earlier, Slovenian President Borut Pahor said his country would accept only as many travellers as could be funnelled directly on to Austria. He said Slovenia was determined not to be left holding the bag should Austria or Germany suddenly stop accepting refugee applicants.

"As long as Austria will control the flow of refugees, we will have to do the same on the Slovenian-Croatian border," Pahor said.

At the main border crossing, Slovenia was bracing for a convoy of about 40 buses containing more than 2,000 people in addition to two trains that arrived Monday with an estimated 3,800 people aboard.

An empty Serb field near the border town of Berkasovo littered with belongings illustrated how desperately campers wanted to cross the border. Only hours before, its rows of military-style tents had been packed with people fleeing war and poverty in the Middle East, Asia and Africa. Now only a few hundred remained. Dozens in the near distance could be seen walking into Croatia, some of them walking in sandals or slippers without socks, which had become clogged with mud. Many carried children on their backs to spare them from the mud-bath.

Left behind in the scramble were stuffed toys, a milk bottle, a child's rubber boot, crayons scattered in the mud and soaked blankets. Cleaning crews could be seen collecting the scattered belongings with shovels in hopes of clearing the boggy field in time for the next migrant wave coming north from Macedonia.

Paths blocked

Officials in Serbia, Slovenia and Croatia all accused each other of making a bad situation worse. Slovenia, insisting on the transfer limit of 2,500 from Croatia, accused the Croats of breaking previous agreements to observe those numbers. Croatian officials insisted no such binding deal could be enforced because they lacked legal powers to confine travellers to Croat emergency shelters, which remain less than half full.

Migrants walk in the field near the village of Babska, Croatia, close to the Serbia-Croatian border, on Monday. Tension was building among thousands of migrants two days after Hungary closed its border with Croatia and the flow of people was redirected to a much slower route via Slovenia. (Darko Vojinovic/AP)

When the day's first refugee train containing an estimated 1,800 people stopped near Slovenia shortly after midnight, people found their path blocked in both directions by rival deployments of Croat and Slovene police, each arguing that the trekkers must seek shelter in the opposite direction.

This created an effective no-man's land on the border and forced many to spend the night stuck in the open and struggling to sleep amid bitter cold, driving rain and wailing children. Some travellers piled up soggy tree branches for fires.

"It's completely unacceptable," said Slovene Interior Minister Vesna Gyorkos Znidar, who accused Croatia of ignoring Slovenian appeals and of seeking to dump "an unlimited number of immigrants" on Slovenia rather than make proactive efforts to coax thousands into staying at Croatian shelters.

But Croatia retorted that it, too, was being unfairly burdened by unrelenting flows from Serbia, where U.N. officials estimate another 10,000 asylum seekers more than double the summer's typical flow are currently travelling north to Croatia.