As hundreds of migrants continue to be barred from crossing the Greece-Macedonia border, a handful of Iranians there sewed their lips together to protest the predicament.
One of the men, a 34-year-old electrical engineer named Hamid, was asked by Reuters where he wanted to go. "To any free country in the world. I cannot go back. I will be hanged," he said.
The influx of migrants into Macedonia has heightened tensions in the country, the country's president has said.
"The risk of possible conflict between refugees and migrants, the migrants and police and army, and between migrants and local people is rated as high," President Gjorgje Ivanov told reporters on Sunday after meeting with visiting European Council president Donald Tusk in Macedonia's capital, Skopje.
Several European countries, including EU members Slovenia and Croatia and non-members Serbia and Macedonia, have declared they will only allow "war-zone refugees" from Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria to transit through their countries on their way to central and northern Europe.
This policy has left many others stranded in the Greek border town for four days, demanding to be let in and chanting slogans such as "Freedom!" and "We are not terrorists."
On Sunday, another Iranian man threatened to cut his wrists with a razor if not allowed into Macedonia. Police intervened to disarm him, but, in the scuffle, he cut his face.
After waiting four days at the Macedonia-Greek border, this man tried to cut his wrists with a razor to protest new border controls that only allow passage to Syrians, Afghans and Iraqis. Police intervined before he could do serious harm to himself, but the scene was unsettling #Idomeni #Greece #Refugees #RefugeeCrisis A photo posted by Diego Cupolo (@diegocupolo) on Nov 23, 2015 at 1:13am PST
The number of migrants being barred from entering Macedonia has fallen significantly Sunday, from more than 2,000 to around 1,300 in the early evening. Many of them took buses and taxis to Athens and Thessaloniki. Greek police believe they may be trying to find other routes, including with the help of smugglers.
Ivanov also said that Macedonia has the capacity to shelter about 2,000 people in its temporary transit centers.
"Any increase in these numbers will increase permanent and direct threats and risks for the national security of Macedonia," he added.
A total of 6,000 refugees crossed into Macedonia from early Saturday through early Sunday, police say. About 500,000 refugees have transited through Macedonia in 2015.