Greek border guards stopped a vehicle on a provincial road in the Rodopi region over the weekend and found six migrants hidden inside, arresting the driver in the latest enforcement action along one of the country's most active smuggling corridors.
Officers from the Sapes Border Guard Department intercepted the car during a targeted patrol of the regional road network.
The driver, a foreign national whose identity has not been released, was taken into custody. Authorities seized the vehicle and a mobile phone used to coordinate the transport.
The suspect is scheduled to appear before the Rodopi prosecutor on felony charges related to the illegal transportation of foreign nationals.
The arrest is part of a broader spring enforcement push by the Rodopi Police Directorate aimed at disrupting inland transfer networks that move migrants deeper into Greek territory after crossing the Evros border.
Traffickers have increasingly relied on secondary roads and private vehicles to avoid detection at main checkpoints — a tactic that poses serious safety risks given the speed and remoteness of the routes involved.
Irregular crossings along the Evros corridor fell roughly 50 percent in early 2026 compared to the same period last year, according to Frontex data, but law enforcement officials say the drop in volume has not reduced the sophistication or the danger of the networks still operating in the area.
The Sapes department is leading the investigation to establish the migrants' origins and determine whether the driver is connected to a larger smuggling operation.