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Vladimir Simicek/AFP/Getty Images

Scuffles at European borders as refugees lose patience

Austrian police removed barriers at a border point as tension reached boiling point at Slovenian and Serbian crossings

Refugees traded punches and scuffled with police at a Serbian border crossing and a man was stabbed in a similar clash on the Slovenian border on Thursday as pent-up pressures on their trek toward the European Union boiled over.

Slovenian police said the stabbing incident took place near Rigonci earlier in the day, and that the victim was given medical treatment.

The unrest at Berkasovo village on the Serbian border subsided after several minutes. But the outbreak reflected the frustrations of the tens of thousands of people facing long waits and other hardships as they make their way north over the Balkans each day seeking hoped-for safe haven in prosperous EU countries.

Further along that route, Austrian police moved to relieve tension which they feared could lead to violence, removing barriers at an overcrowded collection point at a border crossing with Slovenia.

A day earlier, thousands of refugees and migrants broke through police obstacles at the same collection center at the Spielfeld border point.

Many of them spilled out of the facility on Thursday but then gathered nearby, following police instructions. But many others walked away from the border.

The collection area just inside the Austrian border was again full by afternoon. Police and soldiers struggled to maintain order as the crowd surged every time a group was separated for transport by bus to shelters and processing.

Trampled, pushed or otherwise hurt, several people were seen receiving medical attention, including one boy, about 8 years old, whose leg was being bandaged and a younger boy being given oxygen. At least two adults were taken away on stretchers.

A police officer with a loudspeaker urged people to sit and wait for buses, warning "if you make trouble, we make trouble."

On the Slovene side, more than 1,000 were waiting for entry, either to apply for asylum in Austria or to transit to other EU nations.

The flow of people over the so-called west Balkans route that begins in Greece has shifted. Migrants and refugees still cross first into Macedonia and then Serbia but now enter Croatia instead of Hungary, which erected a fence along its border to Serbia. From Croatia, they move to Slovenia, which has struggled to deal with the increasing numbers.

In Serbia, groups of people huddled around fires lit to combat the chill at Berkasovo village. Niklas Stoerup Agerup of the U.N. refugee agency, said the number of families with children under the age of 5 transiting into Croatia has been increasing over the past several weeks.

Overnight and early Thursday “we've had a continuous flow of people coming in and also a continuous flow of people managing to cross the border,” he said.

Fadl Abdul, a Palestinian from Lebanon, was among those warming themselves at one of the fires. He said children were particularly vulnerable to the hardships.

“We can sit here, one day, two days without eat … water, OK, no problem,” the 43-year-old said. “But what about the kids? They need milk, they need to change clothes, everything.”

Slovenian authorities say they can handle no more than 2,500 entries per day, and have accused Croatia of sending too many people through.

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