A Yemeni migrant who claimed Tuesday to have been thrown off a vessel by Greek forces was rescued by the Turkish Coast Guard Command in the Aegean Sea.
The migrant told Anadolu Agency (AA) they had been searched, stripped and beaten by the Greek forces, who then took them out to sea and threw them overboard.
The other two migrants with him, including a woman, had drowned in the incident that occurred on Sept. 23.
This was the second such event that reportedly occurred in the past five days.
On Sept. 18, a Cameroon national had made similar claims that he and two others had also been thrown off a Greek coast guard vessel in the Aegean Sea.
He, likewise, said he had managed to swim ashore but the two other migrants with him had drowned.
Turkish gendarmerie identified the Yemeni national in the same region. He said they had made it to the Greek island of Samos, less than 2 kilometers (1.24 miles) from the Turkish coast, on a boat from the Izmir province in western Turkey with a group of Somali, Syrian and Palestinian migrants.
He recounted that, having reached a camp area, he approached a person who he had thought was an official to convey his asylum request. He recounted that this person affirmed his request, asking him to wait while he made a phone call.
"When night came, two people dressed in masks and fully covered arrived. They acted in violence against me. One hit my forehead with a hammer and one hit me on the head. They hit the back of my left shoulder and my left knee, again with a hammer.
"My head kept bleeding for an hour. I was there alone. They brought a civilian vehicle to get me out of there, I wasn't unconscious. I saw that there was a veiled person inside.
"After taking me to the car, they opened the door and brought two Somali nationals. One was a woman and one was a man. They, like me, were strip-searched after being caught. They took their phones and money. They put us in this civilian vehicle and took us to the beach."
There, he recounted, they were put on a Greek coast guard boat from which they were later thrown into the sea without lifevests, even though the Greek forces were aware that the other two migrants could not swim.
After making it back to the Turkish shore, he said he was found by Turkish gendarmerie. "They took me to the police station, gave me food, water and blankets. I thought I was reborn," he said.
After questioning the Yemeni migrant, joint search and rescue efforts were launched by the Turkish coast guard, which recovered the lifeless bodies of two irregular migrants on the shore on Sept. 24.
Turkey has repeatedly condemned Greece's illegal practice of pushing back asylum-seekers, saying it violates humanitarian values and international law by endangering the lives of vulnerable migrants, including women and children.
Turkey's five Aegean provinces – Çanakkale, Balıkesir, Izmir, Muğla and Aydın – are prime spots for refugees leaving Turkey for the European Union, with Greek islands lying within sight of the Turkish coast.
In recent years, hundreds of thousands have made short but perilous journeys across the Aegean in a bid to reach northern and western Europe in search of a better life.
Hundreds of people have died at sea as a number of boats carrying refugees sank or capsized. The Turkish Coast Guard Command has rescued thousands of others.
Pushbacks are considered contrary to international refugee protection agreements, which dictate that people should not be expelled or returned to a country where their life and safety might be in danger due to their race, religion, nationality or membership in a social or political group.
In a new report, the EU Agency for Fundamental Rights (FRA) revealed recently that the difficult conditions and violations of rights in detention and reception centers for migrants at EU borders continue. The report also noted that pushing migrants back to Turkey has become the de facto border policy of Greece and that torture, ill-treatment and pushbacks continue.