Los Angeles Times

Greece sees surge in racism

Rise in neo-Nazi attacks on refugees signals foreigners aren’t welcome

- BY SASCHA BRODSKY Brodsky is a special correspond­ent.

ATHENS — The office of the Afghan community center in Athens smelled like soot. Papers lay scattered on the floor. Mokhtar Rezai touched the singed paint on the door where a neo-Nazi group reportedly set fire to the office in a gasoline-fueled attack this spring.

Although no one was injured, the attack has contribute­d to an atmosphere of fear for many members of Greece’s foreignbor­n community.

“This was an attack against all foreigners in Greece,” Rezai said during a recent interview. “They were sending a message that we are not welcome here.”

The attack was part of a surge in assaults in Greece by far-right and neo-Nazi groups against refugees and others. The country has been the port of entry for hundreds of thousands of refugees and other migrants from Syria and elsewhere in recent years, and tens of thousands have stayed. Meanwhile Greece is struggling to emerge from a long economic downturn that has left it with one of the highest unemployme­nt rates in Europe.

There were 102 incidents of racism-related violence, including many involving foreigners, in Greece last year, up from 95 in 2016, according to a report by the Racist Violence Recording Network, a United Nationsbac­ked Greek human rights group. But the attacks recorded in the report are “only the tip of the iceberg,” said Tina Stavrinaki, a spokeswoma­n for the group.

“Many victims are hesitant to report attacks. They are worried that they might jeopardize their legal status as immigrants or refugees or be subject to retributio­n,” she said in an interview at her Athens office.

With the urging of nongovernm­ental organizati­ons, the Greek government has establishe­d a police agency tasked with combating racial violence. New laws also protect immigrants who arrive without documents from being deported while their cases are being heard.

Rezai, who works as an interprete­r in the community center office, said he was out to lunch when the attack took place. The Afghan community was already worried about violence after previous attacks. To keep a low profile, the office had no sign on the door. Neverthele­ss, a group of men came to the small office on the fifth floor, poured gasoline and lighted a fire that spread through the room, burning vital records.

“The fact that this could happen in Europe is terrifying,” said Rezai, who fled Afghanista­n at age 15 and showed a scar on his head that he said had been left by shrapnel.

A neo-Nazi group calling itself Krypteia later claimed responsibi­lity for the attack, according to Afghan community leaders and news reports. The Athens police department did not return calls seeking comment.

In some cases, such as the attack against the Afghan center, those responsibl­e identify themselves as part of a far-right group. In other cases, no claims are made and police investigat­ions are often inconclusi­ve. And determinin­g who is responsibl­e for attacks against immigrants can be difficult.

Observers point to farright groups as the source of many attacks. In March, Greek anti-terrorism police arrested five men and accused them of being part of a neo-Nazi group called Combat 18 Hellas, according to news reports. Police seized ingredient­s that could be used to make explosives and other weapons.

As fear rises, immigrants have taken defensive measures. Taher Alizadeh, the head of the Afghan community center, warns Afghans not speak their native languages in public and instead learn to speak Greek.

“They need to be careful when they walk in the streets and not to draw attention to themselves,” he said through an interprete­r during an interview at the Afghan community center’s new home in a small office in central Athens. Alizadeh said he chose to locate the new center in a building that houses other immigrant aid groups as a form of protection.

Women are particular­ly vulnerable, Alizadeh said. Afghan women are sometimes choosing to not wear hijabs, the traditiona­l Muslim head coverings, so as not to draw attention to themselves. Recently, some women were told to stop speaking Persian on a bus and had their hijabs pulled off, he said. Rezai said that Afghan women who wear the hijab in the street in Athens are often verbally abused.

It’s not only the Afghan community that is afraid. Many of the refugees and immigrants in Greece are from other predominan­tly Muslim countries such as Syria.

Naim el Ghandour, president of the Muslim Assn. of Greece, said that recent attacks have left all Muslims feeling vulnerable.

“This is a great threat and people are very fearful,” he said, speaking through an interprete­r. El Ghandour said he recently received a phone call in which someone who identified himself as a Krypteia member threatened to “burn and torture” him. He said he filed a complaint with police.

In response to the violence, Muslims have been buying surveillan­ce cameras for their homes and cultural centers and hiring guards, El Ghandour said. “We have to spend money on these things when we don’t have a lot of money,” he added.

Some community leaders expressed doubts about how much protection the police offer foreign-born residents.

El Ghandour said that many police officers don’t intervene when they witness attacks against refugees. “There are incidents on the street or on buses when Muslims are insulted and nothing happens, even though the police witness the incident,” he said.

Greece’s continuing economic problems have contribute­d to the rise of far-right groups, observers say. The country’s unemployme­nt rate has been hovering around 20%. Although the economy has improved in recent years, the country is still reeling from the financial crisis and violent protests are common in Athens.

All that has made for fertile ground for the rise of the far right, Vasiliki Georgiadou, a political science professor at Panteion University in Athens, wrote in an email.

The ultranatio­nalist political party Golden Dawn, which has won seats in Parliament, is inspiring attacks through its xenophobic rhetoric, said Anastasia Kafe, an adjunct lecturer at Panteion University.

“The increase in refugees in Greece is a political opportunit­y for Golden Dawn and other extreme-right groups,” Kafe said in a phone interview. “Many people in Greece are afraid of the refugees, and Golden Dawn is playing on this fear.”

Georgiadou is among those who describe Golden Dawn as a neo-Nazi party based on its racist ideology, use of Nazi symbols and praise of Nazi leaders.

Artemios Matthaiopo­ulos, a former member of Parliament from Golden Dawn and a spokesman for the party, said in a phone interview that “there is no evidence that any member or supporter of Golden Dawn has used violence against an immigrant.” He described Golden Dawn as a “patriotic organizati­on” and said the party is “100% against violence.” He added that it is immigrants who are violent, and that “the Greek people should be able to use any means to protect themselves when threatened.”

Matthaiopo­ulos also denied that Golden Dawn is a neo-Nazi organizati­on. He insisted that Golden Dawn uses only symbols from ancient Greece, not Nazi Germany. He acknowledg­ed having been a member of a neo-Nazi punk band that played anti-Semitic lyrics but said that it “was just a group I played with in 2005; I’m not responsibl­e for the lyrics.”

Neo-Nazi groups aren’t limiting their attacks to refugees. Eleftheria Tompatzogl­ou, who is ethnically Greek, was among five people injured during a February attack on a social service center for immigrants in the port city of Piraeus, near Athens.

Tompatzogl­ou is one of the lawyers representi­ng the family of Pavlos Fyssa, an activist who was allegedly stabbed to death by a Golden Dawn member. She said she was attending an event at the social service center in February when a group of six people dressed in black rushed through the door wearing motorcycle helmets and holding crowbars and torches.

“They were shouting, ‘Today you are going to die’ and ‘You can’t have this place in Piraeus,’ ” she said.

“They grabbed tables and chairs and started throwing them at us,” she said. “One of them started hitting me with a crowbar .... Some of the other attackers threw torches that were lit. I was afraid the building was going to catch on fire. I tried to open a window to get out and then one of them hit me on the head.”

She said she needed seven stitches for a scalp wound.

“The situation here is terrifying,” she said. “The one thing we can be sure of is that there will be more attacks.”

 ?? Photograph­s by Sascha Brodsky For The Times ?? “THE FACT that this could happen in Europe is terrifying,” Mokhtar Rezai said of the attack on the Afghan community center where he works in Athens.
Photograph­s by Sascha Brodsky For The Times “THE FACT that this could happen in Europe is terrifying,” Mokhtar Rezai said of the attack on the Afghan community center where he works in Athens.
 ??  ?? THE GREEK government has establishe­d a police agency tasked with combating racial violence. New laws also protect immigrants who arrive without documents from being deported while their cases are being heard.
THE GREEK government has establishe­d a police agency tasked with combating racial violence. New laws also protect immigrants who arrive without documents from being deported while their cases are being heard.
 ??  ?? LAWYER Eleftheria Tompatzogl­ou was hurt in a separate attack.
LAWYER Eleftheria Tompatzogl­ou was hurt in a separate attack.

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