Show Navigation

Cinzia D'Ambrosi

  • PROJECTS
  • HATE HURTS PROJECT
  • Blog and News
  • Photo books
  • Tearsheets
  • About
  • Contact
  • ARCHIVE

Cinzia D'Ambrosi

All Galleries
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x
Download

18 images Created 17 Jun 2018

Hate Hurts (Bulgaria, Serbia, Hungary)

Hate Hurts projects investigates and exposes structural violence against refugees and asylum seekers from European governments’ own security forces. I began this project in Greece in 2015 and since then, I have travelled back and forth in the Balkan region, mostly along borders areas.
In my quest to investigate the enormity and the structurality of the violence inflicted on refugees, I have been recording accounts even where access has been very difficult. I entered centers where securities had denied me access, been in squatted building, abandoned premises and in uncharted areas, in forests along the borders of Hungary, Croatia and Serbia. My reporting has taken place in the form of audio recording, photographs and videos. Often in very limited time, I met with refugees and recorded their visible scars, their photographs of wounds and aftermaths episodes of destruction of possessions (such as mobiles, tents, clothes, shoes). I have created a dedicated website where these accounts are uploaded as well as material that refugees send to me to publish.
The accounts that I have recorded are horrendous: dogs unleashed to bite, bones broken, knees smashed with electric batons, knives, skin being pulled ‘like a Kosher’. Humiliation is another tactic adopted by border police; being left naked in the cold winter weather to walk to the nearest village. And also emotional and psychological trauma caused by indefinite detention and limbo conditions. The effects of these on emotional well being is tangible. The scale of physical violence and the psychological harm is not abating, rather recent accounts that I took in Bosnia Hercegovina point to heightened cruelty, and this time from Croatia police. The scale of violence is so widespread, that women and children have being also undiscriminately subjected to.
I am working on the Hate Hurts project to bring to light the existing ongoing violence and this must stop. I am also bringing to attention how violence is systematic and linked to political nationalistic and populist gains strongly gaining ground in Europe. Collectively we need to be aware of the danger of this.
View: 100 | All

Loading ()...

  • I met M. in AC Krnjaca refugee camp just coming from an hospital. During the night he was trying to cross to Croatia and was beaten,. His arm was fractured. He recounts: ‘I was going to cross into Croatia border coming from Serbia. I had a lot of beating, bones broken. They left me in pain just lying on the floor, like that.’ M., AC Krnjaca refugee camp, Belgrade, Serbia.
    DSC_2137.jpg
  • Meisam is in Krnaca refugee camp is Serbia with his family. He confides: ‘ Bulgarian police beat us, they fight they make a lot of problems for refugees. We tried to cross with smugglers before but the police beat us all. They take everything from us.’AC Krnjaca, Serbia.
    DSC_2118_001.jpg
  • Bawafa has been separated by his mum and sister in Turkey. In Belgrade now, recounts the endless tries to cross the border, beatings and the painful separation from his mother and sister. Recounting the events that led to his separation and sharing his wish to be reunited, he silently cries.- Bawafa, refugee from Afghanistan, Belgrade, Serbia.
    _DSC1368_01.jpg
  • I met Mostafa as he was hiding along the border between Serbia/Croatia. He had been beaten many times. In the last event, he was beaten by the Bulgarian police and all his money and mobile phone was taken from him.
    _DSC1070.jpg
  • ‘Border police send dogs on us, they beat us every time I tried to cross the border. One time, I lost the group of friends I was with and I was three nights and three days alone in the jungle. I was scared and I also became ill. I went back to the Bulgarian border police and I asked them to help me. They didn’t, they beat him and then sent him to Busmantsi detention centre.’ Voenna Rampa, Bulgaria.
    _DSC7136.jpg
  • ‘I knew I was going to be beaten. A group of Bulgarian youths, maybe 12 of them, wearing black hoods covering their faces, came up to me and asked if I could speak Bulgarian. I knew that the question was to determine my refugee status and to ascertain that I was not able to seek help. They pushed me in the bus shelter so that I ha no escape routes. I was beaten but managed to escape running as fast as I could. When I was given medication at the Red Cross, the police was called and asked me what I wanted them to do. I said that Id did not care that those that beat me would be punished, but I wanted it to stop and protection so that we could go out without fearing for our lives.’ Mohamed, refugee from Afghanistan,Voempa Rampa, Sofia, Bulgaria.
    _DSC7282.JPG
  • "Bulgarian police here is not like in the rest of Europe. They don't respect you. They don't see us as human. They see us as another creature."  S.,Sofia, Bulgaria, 2018
    _DSC7110.jpg
  • ‘I was in the jungle for 5 days. When I tried to enter Bulgaria, I was pushed back. Some people died in the jungle because of no food, water and cold weather. I walked for 12 hours. If you don’t have money for an agent (smuggler) you are stuck. The agent is the only choice but they don't care for you.’ Karim, outside Voenna Rampa refugee centre, Sofia, Bulgaria.
    _DSC7050.jpg
  • ‘I lost my home in Pakistan, I had nothing. When I came through the border in Bulgaria, the police stopped me. I had no documents. I paid them money. If you don’t have money to pay them, they take you to the police station and beat you. They hate refugees, I think. One time, I was going to take a train to Sofia city centre with two of my friends, a group of people came down from another train and I knew they were coming to beat us. I saw the train next to me about to go and in a split of a second, I jumped in. I saved myself. My friends were badly beaten.’ <br />
Q., Sofia, Bulgaria.
    _DSC7310.jpg
  • ‘Bulgarian borders police send their dogs on us, they beat us.. once time he tried to go to the border but he lost his friends in the jungle. For two days he was without food and water and he was ill. He decided to go back and went to the Bulgarian border police. They beat him and did not help him to go to Sofia even if he told them he was sick. He was then put in a detention centre.’
    _DSC7141.jpg
  • I was not given permission to enter the refugee camps in Bulgaria, even if I followed all the procedures adequately. The State Agency for Refugees at the Ministerial Council refused and even demanded that I should go to see them. I thought of a way around this, so I asked an independent lawyer if he could help by asking refugees inside the centre that they would have liked to share their experiences to meet me outside. This is one of the refugees that came to meet me outside Voenna Rampa refugee centre in Sofia. He shared: 'I came from Turkey, crossed the border. I was taken into a closed camp, Busmantsi, which is like a jail. I was there for one month. Then I went to Harmanly, a town near the border of Turkey (it has a refugee centre) and after I tried to enter Serbia. On the border Bulgaria/Serbia I was caught by the Bulgarian police and put in jail for three months. The police beat me- that is a normal thing as they beat everyone that try to cross the border.' - refugee from Afghanistan, outside Voenna Rampa refugee centre, Sofia, Bulgaria
    _DSC7183.jpg
  • "We were caught by the Bulgarian police. They beat us cruelly, they don’t look where they are beating, on which part of the body and I was beaten on my knee and my knee cup was busted<br />
I still have a problem in my knee, I feel pain, cannot walk normally. I was taken to a close camp, then to an open camp.<br />
I spent 40 days in the closed camp. They treat us and think of us as animals.They abuse us in the camp. It is really a bad situation for refugees in the camp in Bulgaria." M. refugee from Pakistan, Adasevci, Serbia.
    _DSC0974.jpg
  • G. from Syria is living in Voenna Rampa refugee camp in Sofia. She became separated from the rest of her family in her journey to Europe. Her husband is in Germany and her two sons are in Denmark. She is all alone in the camp, without any means to support herself. Even if old and suffering from ailments she goes to a market to sell clothes that other refugees also in need gives her to sell. G. told me that she has also being a victim of police abuse when taken in to the camp.
    _DSC7262.jpg
  • _DSC7151.jpg
  • "We have tried to cross the border many times and we have been pushed back. One time police with masks on, find us. We were inside a van. They beat the driver. Then they open the door of the van and punched me. I heard many stories of violence from the police. This was my first time." - Belgrade refugee camp.
    DSC_2082.jpg
  • "Bulgarian police here is not like in the rest of Europe. They don't respect you. They don't see us as human. They see us as another creature. I would like to go to the UK as I have been told people are treated better." Voenna  S.,Sofia, Bulgaria, 2018
    _DSC7109.jpg
  • ‘I was in the jungle for 5 days. When I tried to enter Bulgaria, I was pushed back. Some people died in the jungle because of no food, water and cold weather. I walked for 12 hours. If you don’t have money for an agent you are stuck. The agent is the only choice but they don't care for you.’ Karim, Sofia, Bulgaria.
    _DSC7048_001.jpg
  • 'That's the problem.. in Bulgaria the police attack us..This happened with a knife. When they see us, they beat us.' Adasevci, Serbia
    _DSC0983.jpg