Thousands enter Budapest station after standoff but authorities say no international trains will depart.Thousands of refugees have flooded into the main train station in Budapest after police re-opened it following a two-day standoff.

The refugees had spent the night outside the station in the heart of the Hungarian capital until the gates to the the station was opened on Thursday.
They want to get on trains to either Austria or Germany, but for two days, authorities blocked them from travelling.
A few hours later, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban said that his country should have a package of regulations in place by September 15, including a physical barrier, to counter an influx of migrants.
Hungary has been widely criticised for its way of handling the mass flow of refugees to Europe.
"We Hungarians are full of fear, people in Europe are full of fear because they see that the European leaders, among them the prime ministers, are not able to control the situation," Orban said after a meeting with European Parliament President Martin Schulz in Brussels.
"I came here to inform the president that Hungary did everything possible in order to keep the regulations."
Al Jazeera's Andrew Simmons, reporting from Budapest, said: "It was like a human tide racing through the entrance of the station. It was an extraordinary scene."
"It reminds us of the World War II refugee crisis," our correspondent added.
Police block refugees from Hungary train station
"Some sources say Austria agreed to take in 1,500 refugees. However, there is no official statement on the issue."
In a statement on Thursday, Hungary's railway operator said no international trains would be leaving the Keleti station "for an indefinite period".
On Wednesday, the refugees shouted "freedom, freedom" and called to be let onto trains as Hungarian authorities said for a second day that they would prevent anyone without a valid visa from entering the station.
The station has been open to Hungarians and tourists but refugees, even those with valid tickets, were turned away.

Why Al Jazeera will not say Mediterranean 'migrants'

The chaotic scenes in Budapest came as the International Organization for Migration published new figures revealing the scale of Europe's biggest refugee crisis since World War II.
Out of the 350,000 arrivals by sea so far this year, 234,770 alone were in Greece, the figures showed.
That figure by itself is more than the entire European total for all of 2014.
Hungary has been criticised for its response to the crisis, including the construction of a fence on its border.
Hungary's parliament could pass most of the legal amendments aimed at stemming an influx of refugees and migrants this week, possibly reducing the number of illegal border crossings to "zero" by the middle of the month, a senior ruling party legislator said on Thursday.
EU President Donald Tusk, meanwhile, warned that divisions between western member states and their newer eastern partners were complicating efforts to solve the deepening refugee crisis.
"There is a divide ... between the east and the west of the EU. Some member states are thinking about containing the wave of migration, symbolised by the Hungarian [border] fence," Tusk said.
Source: Al Jazeera and agencies