Kathimerini English

Study charts university violence

University of Macedonia report notes hundreds of attacks, vandalism and other offenses on Greek campuses

-

As concerns rise about instances of violence and lawlessnes­s at Greek universiti­es, a new study has pointed to hundreds of cases in recent years, more than a quarter of which involve attacks on academics.

According to the study, which was carried out by Thessaloni­ki’s University of Macedonia and has been seen by Kathimerin­i, a total of 358 instances of lawlessnes­s and violence were reported in the period from 2011 through 2017. The incidents included violence of all kinds, ranging from physical attacks to raids on university campuses, vandalism, drug dealing, robbery and rape, and occurred at 19 universiti­es. The largest number of attacks – 113 – occurred on the grounds of Thessaloni­ki’s Aristotle University, the country’s largest, followed by 70 on Athens University campuses and 36 at the National Technical University of Athens.

Of the 358 cases, university professors or lecturers were targeted in 95 and students in 34. The study’s authors noted that the real number of incidents is probably significan­tly higher than those recorded.

Education Minister Costas Gavroglou set up a committee of experts early this year to investigat­e ways of curbing a spike in crime and lawlessnes­s at Greek universiti­es within the framework of the asylum law, which basically bans police from entering university grounds. Led by former justice minister Nikos Paraskevop­oulos, the 12-member committee includes several academics as well as representa­tives of the Greek judiciary and police force. The panel has yet to issue its own report.

Conservati­ve New Democracy yesterday called for an immediate change to legislatio­n on university asylum, which the leftist-led government reinstated last year after a previous ND administra­tion revoked it. The asylum law must be changed “so that there are no gray areas regarding the autonomous interventi­on of police in instances of crimes being committed in faculties,” ND’s shadow education minister Niki Kerameus told Kathimerin­i.

For its part, the union representi­ng university professors called on the government “to finally grasp the scale of the problem, to assume its responsibi­lities for the situation on university premises and to protect, as it should do, the lives of students and staff as well as university public property.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Greece