This photo sums up the slow-motion tragedy unfolding in Europe
Over the last two months, the number of refugees arriving to Europe has reached new heights and the EU is struggling to deal with the hundreds of thousands of people coming in.
A majority of asylum seekers are coming from Syria and have travelled through Turkey, Greece, Macedonia and Serbia. Clashes between migrants and the police have become more frequent and violent as European authorities have been failing to deal with the added influx of people arriving to the continent.
In Hungary, a fence had been hastily erected on the Serbian border in a bid to keep migrants out, who are, according to Hungary's Prime Minister Viktor Orban, a threat to Europe's existence.
Last week, Macedonia became the focal point of the crisis when reports of police using stun grenades and beating refugees with truncheons surfaced. Macedonia then declared a state of emergency and sealed the border.
Tensions in Europe have been flaring, especially in Germany where neo-Nazi protesters have gathered outside homes housing asylum seekers and many shelters have been set on fire. On Thursday up to 50 refugees were found dead in a truck in Austria.
According to Frontex, the European border agency, over the January-July 2015 period an estimated 330.000 asylum seekers have entered Europe.