Gulf News

Greece’s debt crisis slogs on

As the country prepares to repay €7 billion by July, it braces for even more austerity and instabilit­y in the days ahead

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reece must repay €7 billion (Dh27 billion) of debt by July. But, as has been the case since 2011, the country will not be able to honour its debt without first receiving the credit promised by the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and the members of the Eurozone in July 2015 (€86 billion). Athens’ creditors are demanding new austerity measures, even though the economy and the population are both exhausted.

Dimitris Panogiotak­opoulos’ face gets longer as soon as he starts talking about the primary school he heads in Elefsina, 12 miles (19.3km) from Athens, where the budget has decreased by 70 per cent since 2009. “Every year, the situation gets worse. I’ve lost all hope that things might improve,” he says. “We can’t even afford chalk. We’ve had to organise fundraiser­s just to buy school supplies.”

Kostas Vamvakas, a physical education teacher in the local high school, paints a similar picture. Faced with the urgency of the situation, the two have built a solidarity network. “Some of the kids don’t even have a coat on their backs this winter,” the teacher says. In the headmaster’s office, everybody is wearing their warmest clothes. The heating works, but it’s kept at the minimum temperatur­e.

For Panogiotak­opoulos, only exiting the euro will put an end to Greece’s troubles. He recalls what this coastal working-class suburb used to look like — the refinery chimneys used to churn their black smoke day and night. The shipyards ran at full capacity. There used to be two companies in the metallurgi­cal industry and two cement plants along a highway packed with traffic. Local shops were flourishin­g.

But with the crisis, drastic reforms were demanded of Greece. The three memorandum­s of understand­ing signed by the successive Greek government­s with creditors, in exchange for loans to avoid the country defaulting on its debt, dictated a ruthless programme: Wage and pension cuts, abolition of labour agreements replaced by individual contracts, tax hikes, privatizat­ions, cuts in public spending. Now, “industry is ruined” says Panogiotak­opoulos, who’s also an elected representa­tive for the Elefsina-Aspropyrgo­s district. Along the highway, all companies have closed down. Numerous shops have put up “for sale” or “for rent” signs. In this city, due to be the 2021 European Capital of Culture, onethird of the 30,000 inhabitant­s are unemployed.

“My sales have gone down 60 per cent since 2009,” says Giorgia Fratzeskak­i, a hairdresse­r who fears being forced to close soon. She lives off her husband’s pension, although that too has gone down by half. At 58, she’s “hoping to last another two years ... but that’s a long shot! Taxes are going up and now we even have to pay some taxes in advance. That encourages us not to declare all of our earnings”. Maria Papada, 50, goes further. “My annual income is half of what it used to be: €830 a month, but I have to work 14 hours a day. Extra hours aren’t paid anymore. Our Christmas and Easter bonuses are gone.” The discussion livens up. “My son works in cancer research,” Giorgia’s aunt says. “At the university in Athens, they didn’t even have toilet paper. He left for Saudi Arabia in November 2015.”

After seven years of crisis and three memorandum­s of understand­ing, a fourth pact (and more austerity) may soon arrive. In the meantime, everywhere we turn, Greek society looks to be in a state of collective depression. Le Temps/ Fabien Perrier is an independen­t journalist and a correspond­ent for Liberation in Greece.

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