| A baby covered in a thermal blanket cries at a makeshift camp at the northern Greek border station of Idomeni. |
"It has just gone beyond imagination how bad it can get and each day we are getting more rain, people are suffering," added Baloch after getting a first-hand view. Greek authorities say there are about 12 000 people in the camp. NGOs say more than 2 000 others are having to survive in fields beyond its perimeter.
Conditions have become unhygienic in the extreme - toilets have oveflowed while dozens of children have been hospitalised suffering from breathing difficulties and an assortment of viruses.
One 9-year-old Syrian girl with hepatitis A was hospitalised at nearby Thessalonika, where the Keelpno disease prevention centre reported her condition as stable. The Greek government said on Saturday it would deal with the crisis at Idomeni within a week by transferring refugees there to other reception centres.
But the UNHCR underlined the situation required urgent attention. "We as UNHCR hope that the Greek authorities move fast ... because remaining here even one minute is not an option," said Baloch.
"They cannot be kept here for long in these inhumane conditions. They need to be offered a way out of here and they are desperate. You see children shivering, walking barefoot on the road here in this misery. It is just unimaginable."
Sunday saw a 200-strong group of Syrians and Iraqis, including many children, demonstrate at Idomeni, demanding the border be re-opened, just the latest in a succession of daily protests.
The refugees are clinging on, despite the atrocious conditions, in the hope that an EU summit on Thursday will bring decisions to aid their plight and lead to the border being reopened.
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