Turkey is due to start receiving migrants who crossed the Aegean Sea for EU member Greece from Monday but so far details have been vague over how the transfer will be implemented.
Work has now started on a centre in the major Aegean tourist resort of Cesme in Izmir province, which faces the Greek island of Chios that has been a major target for migrants, the town's mayor said today.
Water pipes and electricity cables are being laid for the 500 square-metre area by the Ulusoy harbour in Cesme, mayor Muhittin Dalgic was quoted as saying by the Anatolia news agency.
The centre will have tents for finger-printing migrants, registering them as well as sanitation facilities, he said.
But Turkish officials said such centres were not refugee camps but processing points from which the migrants will be sent elsewhere as soon as possible.
"We intend to complete this work with them staying for as short a time as possible," he added.
There have been fears in Turkey's fashionable Aegean resorts that a sudden influx of migrants could prompt a backlash from locals and put off tourists.
It remains to be seen how the initial transfers will proceed. Pictures broadcast by NTV television yesterday showed only a barren space at the site of the proposed Dikili centre.
The Milliyet daily carried a report today saying that as the Dikili centre was not finished, the first registrations from Monday would take part in indoor sports arenas in the town.
Turkish media reports meanwhile have said the Turkish Red Crescent is preparing to open a new refugee camp with capacity for 5,000 people further inland in Manisa in western Turkey -- its first outside the south and east of the country -- to accommodate the new influx.
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