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Refugees would sometimes get into fights. Was there ever stealing? "Yes, of course!" says Deseina. "Many children. They take things and run. We run behind them!" The people living there stole mostly candy or cigarettes. But it's not like the Eko crew didn't benefit from the steady stream of customers. After leaving the Eko station, we learned that refugees bought food and other supplies. And according to one aid group, management charged 4 euros (or about $4.50) for a 15-minute shower, and 1 euro to charge a phone. That last fact alone underscores the importance of tech in this crisis.

If you stop to think about it, Eko really is just one big recharging station, -- Richard Nieva, A large faded ad for Olympic Airways is plastered on a building at Ellinikon International, Athens' former airport, It's a giant picture of gold-rimmed, circular glasses and it seems like something out of "The Great Gatsby," where an uncannily similar billboard, often interpreted as iphone 8 screen protector privacy the eyes of God, overlooks the Valley of Ashes, The airport closed in 2001 but has since become an unofficial refugee camp, Inside a small blue tent, Saeed Sultani shares his story, He's a goldsmith from Kandahar, Afghanistan, who came to Greece with his wife and 4-year-old daughter four months ago, He points out the squalid conditions..

"You can see. We don't have nothing here," he says. He's dressed nicely, wearing shades and a white button-down shirt tucked into his jeans. His family was a target for the Taliban because they had some money and worked with gold, he tells us. "We were little bit rich -- not a lot, but some."We finish talking and say our goodbyes. But he stops me before I go. "Let me ask you something else," he says. "Can anyone help us from this situation?""We are here many months. We see many people, many NGOs, many reporters, from everywhere, from every country. They're just coming and asking and..lalala..finished. We don't see any movement, or anything good for us. It's just for reporting or make money from refugees. That's it. They don't do anything. They just make some report, and that's it."He's right. This is the most covered, tweeted, Facebooked, YouTubed, blogged refugee crisis the world has ever seen. There are 57,000 migrants stranded in Greece.

I don't have an answer for him, -- Richard Nieva, Sofia starts her days bouncing between 20 Facebook groups for people helping refugees in Greece, She sifts through a cacophony of chats and online posts, answering questions, providing news updates and organizing and circulating requests for iphone 8 screen protector privacy urgent needs, She unplugs and goes into "mama mode" from when her 4-year-old daughter returns from school until the child gets tucked into bed, After that, she's on her laptop until 2 in the morning, Sofia has become an active grassroots organizer for the refugee crisis in Greece, even though the 36-year-old student is 2,000 miles away in Norway, She's part of a network of online coordinators scattered around the world, including in the US, UK and Turkey..

"It's chaotic, multitasking work," she tells me on a video call in June over Facebook Messenger. I can see she wears big, ash-black glasses and red lipstick. "It's impossible to disconnect."Sofia, who uses a pseudonym to protect herself from anti-immigrant critics in her country, represents a new kind of unofficial aid worker in Europe's refugee crisis: The virtual volunteer, raising funds, coordinating workers and disseminating information from anywhere in the world. All you need is time, energy and a computer.

 
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