Some 5,000 migrants fled yesterday when dozens of tents and shelters at the Moria camp on the island of Lesbos were torched, in a blaze sparked when migrants of different nationalities got into a brawl.
The people arrested - including Afghans, Iraqis as well as one national each from Senegal, Syria and Cameroon - were taken into custody over the violence that led to the fire, a police source said.
The Moria unrest underscored the ongoing urgency of Europe's biggest refugee crisis since World War II as the UN refugee agency warned fatalities in the Mediterranean could outstrip last year's total of almost 4,000.
Billionaire investor George Soros also waded into the fray today by saying he was investing USD 500 million in migrant start-ups.
Greek police said the Moria fire destroyed 60 pre-fabricated structures, 100 tents and three shipping containers that housed camp services.
"My tent burned down. I've nothing left but the clothes on my back," Hamid, a young Iranian, told AFP.
A ministerial source said the camp would be rebuilt as soon as possible but in the meantime authorities were placing families in another camp on Lesbos, where there are in excess of 5,600 people, over 2,000 above nominal capacity.
Brawls are common among people desperate to avoid being returned to Turkey or their home countries after spending a small fortune and risking their lives trying to escape poverty and persecution.
"It is not surprising," said Roland Schoenbauer, a UNHCR representative in Greece, pointing to a "lack of security" at the camp.
Greece overall currently hosts more than 60,000 refugees and migrants, most looking to travel to Germany and other affluent EU countries.
But they are unable to do so after several eastern European and Balkan states shut their borders earlier this year.
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