A new group of some 2,500 migrants was ferried to the port of Piraeus, outside the Greek capital, Athens, on Monday.<br /><br /> Brought to shore from the islands of Kos and Lesbos, most now face a long land journey to reach their chosen destinations like Germany and Sweden. <br /><br /> They are exhausted but relieved to be finally on the mainland.<br /><br /> Syrian refugee Mohamad now plans to move on from Greece.<br /><br /> He said conditions had been very bad at Mytilene, the capital of Lesbos, where he spent five days “in the street, no food, no anything”.<br /><br /> The onward journey means heading to the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM), then onto Serbia and Hungary.<br /><br /> An est. 1,500-2,000 #migrants cross from Greece to Macedonia & on into Serbia every 24 hours http://t.co/JGp7Gpg7s2 pic.twitter.com/KpoZ3GZUj2— IOM (@IOM_news) August 31, 2015<br /><br /> Most of those making the journey hail from conflict zones like Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan – easy prey for human traffickers exploiting their misery.<br /><br /> On board a Serbia-b
