There was total confusion for some 3,000 refugees and migrants on Saturday after they got stranded between Serbia and Croatia.<br /><br /> Croatian police say Serbian buses had dropped them off in an empty field near the border.<br /><br /> On the Croatian side local villagers in Strošinci stepped in to help.<br /><br /> Buses were then organised to take people to a local train station, from where they have been transported on towards Hungary.<br /><br /> “They closed the border at Bajakovo, so people came here. So be it, let them pass. Let them save their lives. Nobody is running away from a good life,” said one villager, Stjepan Novoselac.<br /><br /> After pressure from the European Union, Croatia has re-opened its border with Serbia, ending a week-long standoff that had plunged relations between the two Balkan states to their lowest since Yugoslavia broke up in bloodshed in the 1990s.<br /><br /> During the dispute thousands of refugees and migrants became stranded in Strošinci and surrounding areas. <br /><br /> Many have been taken to a centre at O