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i TOPSHOT - A refugee pour water over a woman who collapsed because of losing her child in a panic move after Macedonian police used tear gas against refugees at the Greek-Macedonian border during their protest demanding the opening of the borders near the village of Idomeni on February 29, 2016.
Macedonian police fired tear gas on February 29, 2016, as a group of some 300 Iraqi and Syrians forced their way through a Greek police cordon and raced towards a railway track between the two countries. With Austria and Balkan states capping the numbers of migrants entering their soil, there has been a swift buildup along the Greece-Macedonia border with Athens warning that the number of people "trapped" could reach up to 70,000 by next month. / AFP / LOUISA GOULIAMAKI (Photo credit should read LOUISA GOULIAMAKI/AFP/Getty Images) - ' - ' Adobe Photoshop CS5 Windows 2016-03-02T13:26:25-05:00 LOUISA GOULIAMAKI 0220 W W Ducky Z http://ns.adobe.com/xap/1.0/ AFP_8C50P LOUISA GOULIAMAKI migration TOPSHOTS Horizontal TOPSHOT - A refugee pour water over a woman who collapsed because of losing her child in a panic move after Macedonian police used tear gas against refugees at the Greek-Macedonian border during their protest demanding the opening of the borders near the village of Idomeni on February 29, 2016.
Macedonian police fired tear gas on February 29, 2016, as a group of some 300 Iraqi and Syrians forced their way through a Greek police cordon and raced towards a railway track between the two countries. With Austria and Balkan states capping the numbers of migrants entering their soil, there has been a swift buildup along the Greece-Macedonia border with Athens warning that the number of people "trapped" could reach up to 70,000 by next month. / AFP / LOUISA GOULIAMAKI (Photo credit should read LOUISA GOULIAMAKI/AFP/Getty Images) POL zPhotoshop 3.0 8BIM AZ %G xITOPSHOT - A refugee pour water over a woman who collapsed because of losing her child in a panic move after Macedonian police used tear gas against refugees at the Greek-Macedonian border during their protest demanding the opening of the borders near the village of Idomeni on February 29, 2016.
Macedonian police fired tear gas on February 29, 2016, as a group of some 300 Iraqi and Syrians forced their way through a Greek police cordon and raced towards a railway track between the two countries. With Austria and Balkan states capping the numbers of migrants entering their soil, there has been a swift buildup along the Greece-Macedonia border with Athens warning that the number of people "trapped" could reach up to 70,000 by next month. / AFP / LOUISA GOULIAMAKI (Photo credit should read LOUISA GOULIAMAKI/AFP/Getty Images)z lgi &TOPSHOT-GREECE-EUROPE-MIGRANTS-PROTESTP LOUISA GOULIAMAKIU Stringern AFP/Getty Imagess AFP AFP_8C50P7 2016-02-Z Idomenie Greece I POL migration TOPSHOTS
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