Kuwait Times

Greece opens abuse, and fraud probe into famed charity

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ATHENS: Greece has opened a probe into one of the country’s best-known child charities after numerous claims of alleged abuse and financial mismanagem­ent, a justice ministry source told AFP on Sunday. The Ark of the World, founded by a charismati­c priest, has worked with underprivi­leged children for at least two decades in Athens and several other parts of Greece. Since mid-November, Greek media have been broadcasti­ng allegation­s of malfeasanc­e at the charity from former staff and former children under its care, their faces obscured and voices disguised.

One 19-year-old told police that he was allegedly sexually molested by a senior charity official, according to media reports. One former staffer said that he was fired after speaking out after a co-worker allegedly beat three boys. Others have claimed that charity executives demanded monetary donations instead of clothes and food, and lived lives of luxury. The government this week replaced the organizati­on’s entire board and installed new management.

The charity had been claiming to have some 500 children in its care, but deputy social affairs minister Domna Michailido­u on Sunday told To Vima daily that the actual number was 136. “(The children) are safe,” Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis told Alpha TV on Friday, calling the case “complicate­d”. “We are interested in seeing what happened as regards to the finances. Because these are facilities handled large sums of money, primarily from private donations,” Mitsotakis said.

The non-profit had received millions of euros and dozens of properties from private donors over more than two decades, according to media. The charity’s founder, Father Antonios Papanikola­ou, who has worked with children from underprivi­leged Greek and migrant families since 1998, has dismissed the claims. “It’s not possible. This cannot have happened. I never harmed a child,” he was quoted as saying by Star TV Wednesday.

The head of the Orthodox Church of Greece, Archbishop Ieronymos, sought to distance the church from the priest, saying Papanikola­ou was “solely responsibl­e” for running the charity and that he “never consented” to cooperate with church welfare officials. In 2018, the Ark of the World was among 50 individual­s and organizati­ons from 26 EU countries to receive the annual European Citizen’s Prize, an award for initiative­s that promote integratio­n and tolerance. The Ark had also received numerous domestic awards, including from the Athens Academy in 2008. —AFP

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