-
Greece is one of the main entry gates into Europe.
-
We don't even have basic needs,
-
sometimes we stay all day without eating food.
-
You see, I sleep in the park.
-
They seek safety in Europe, but Greece is not safe.
-
You come to Greece? You will know Greece...
-
No work, no papers, the police, it's a problem...
-
I see frightened people, a lot of frightened people.
-
Sometimes, if you go outside, they try to beat us.
-
There is a very worrying increase in racist violence
-
and we hear about attacks almost daily.
-
Directly on their hearts. Knives on their hearts.
-
I like Greece, but Greeks don't like foreigners.
-
Greeks don't like foreigners, especially black people,
-
they hate foreigners.
-
Most refugees arrive in Europe by foot or by boat,
-
landing in Greece, Italy and Spain.
-
Under EU regulations, asylum claims have to be made
-
in the country through which refugees first enter Europe.
-
They cannot move to another European country.
-
In 2011 the European Court of Human Rights
-
found that asylum seekers in Greece
-
are at risk of inhuman and degrading treatment.
-
First of all it was done for the
deficiencies in the asylum procedure,
-
the detention conditions and living conditions in Greece.
-
Not even the police or the state
-
give us an exact number of refugees.
-
It's complicated. We don't know the number exactly.
-
In 2010 it was estimated by Frontex that about 80%
-
of all those who entered the European Union
-
entered through Greece.
-
So all those people had nowhere to stay, no social welfare,
-
and many of them were just sleeping rough.
-
And they were trapped in Greece,
-
with no possibility to leave and no possibility to stay.
-
We ask for help from the European Union.
-
Things are not going well.
-
Some sleep in the streets and eat from the trash.
-
We are not eating good food.
-
We're going to school hungry.
-
16 year- old Barry lives in a hostel for child refugees,
-
some as young as eight.
-
These images of the conditions inside
-
were filmed by one of the residents.
-
You can see the toilet the way it is.
-
17 year-old Yaseen is a resident in the same hostel.
-
I have big problem.
-
Don't have work,
-
don't have money, don't have clothes,
-
don't have shoes.
-
A few months later Yaseen receives bad news
-
about his family back in Pakistan.
-
Last month they bombed our home,
-
I lost my family.
-
The same summer, Yaseen turns 18
-
and is made to leave the hostel.
-
Since then he has been on the streets.
-
Early in the morning
-
Athens parks are full of refugees sleeping rough.
-
When they are picked up by the
police after crossing the border,
-
they are initially detained,
-
and then left to fend for themselves.
-
Police tell me: Go outside.
-
You see, I sleep in the park.
-
They tell me: Go, ok, go!
-
I have nowhere to go, I don't know nobody.
-
I sleep in the park.
-
Sometimes you pick something from refuse bin to eat.
-
No house, nothing, nothing I can do...
-
Really, here in Greece we suffer a lot.
-
We suffer.
-
We suffer a lot.
-
It is even difficult to eat, pay for water, food...
-
It's hard, it's hard for us.
-
People have to help refugees in this country.
-
They don't have arrangements for refugees.
-
We leave our countries because of problems
-
we don't leave our countries as we like.
-
Nobody likes to leave his country, for his heart.
-
We leave because of the problems.
-
They give me a gun, you know, AK-47,
-
they say 'You have to fight'.
-
Nurdin did not want to fight.
-
His mother sent him out of the country so he would be safe.
-
From Syria he walked for weeks,
-
travelling through Turkey on foot to get to Europe.
-
I'm staying in Axernon, just down the street,
-
I'm staying with my friends.
-
Axernon is a neighbourhood in Athens
-
with a large Somali community.
-
Welcome to Somalia! No Greek, Somalia!
-
This is the place, this is the house I live in.
-
We sleep here, you see.
-
This is mine, I sleep here.
-
There's another 7 guys who sleep here.
-
Not everybody has one,
-
we share, you know, we share the mattresses.
-
- Yeah, ten people.
- Ten people in this room?
-
18 people share this tiny one bedroom flat.
-
We really need help from the other European countries.
-
We really want to get out of this country.
-
We really have problems here.
-
I have a problem with this eye as you can see.
-
I tried to go to the hospital three times.
-
But they didn't help me nothing.
-
Nurdin managed to get a referral
-
and prescription for his eye condition
-
after visiting the free clinic run by Doctors of the World.
-
We started off by only taking care
-
of migrant and refugee patients.
-
It's only for the past six months,
-
since the economic crisis started,
-
that we see a lot of Greek patients as well.
-
At least for the past year, we have a humanitarian crisis
-
because of the economic crisis.
-
There is no money.
-
Yeah, I understand the economy is bad.
-
You people should allow us to leave!
-
It's much too hard.
-
I'm looking for a way to get out of Greece.
-
To any other European country...
-
We see even asylum seekers now
-
that they want to go back to their countries because
-
they have no jobs, they cannot survive in Greece.
-
Maybe I'll go back to my country,
-
because here it's not good for me.
-
My country is better.
-
Mahmud has spent time in an Iranian prison.
-
Here is a situation where you feel that
-
there is dire need for European solidarity.
-
Active solidarity.
-
Because usually immigrants come here,
-
and they don't have legal papers,
-
because they want to go to other European countries.
-
If you want to go to other countries, France, Norway,
-
airport: problem.
-
When we end up in a very poor country,
-
you people should allow us to go!
-
Why?
-
At the airport: Get out! Get out!
-
Always, why?
-
The other member states want Greece to control the borders
-
so that the people don't go irregularly there.
-
We are trapped here like in a prison, it's a prison.
-
I went to the airport, I told them: In this paper
-
they write I have to leave the country within 30 days.
-
So I'm leaving, I'm going to another country.
-
I was arrested, three days in jail...
-
We come here to get papers, but they don't give us any.
-
It's a problem.
-
There are many people and many asylum seekers
-
who do not manage to apply for asylum
-
and may be in the streets of Athens undocumented.
-
You see thousands of people without papers here.
-
The police station in Athens where most refugees
-
make their initial asylum claim is Petrou Ralli.
-
Applications can be made once a week.
-
I'm coming here for two months, every week I'm here.
-
And how long have you been here?
-
Six months.
-
For two years. Every week I come here.
-
No give papers.
-
Some people have been here for three years, ten years.
-
They don't give them papers.
-
We sleep here, Thursday, Friday, Saturday,
-
day and night.
-
In the sun, in the cold.
-
No house, nowhere to sleep, no water, no food, no toilets.
-
Not only do asylum seekers queue day and night,
-
sometimes waiting for months or even years
-
to start their application.
-
They also say the police forcibly disperse them,
-
preventing them from registering their asylum claims.
-
Before you people came, they were pushing us.
-
Like in the slave trade.
-
The police come and chase us away
-
We return and they chase us off again.
-
Police, they beat, beat, beat.
-
They beat people.
-
They say we should go.
-
You people stay here for quite long,
-
so that they cannot pursue us again.
-
An interpreter was willing to speak
-
about her experiences working at this police station,
-
on condition of anonymity
-
Her words are spoken by an actress.
-
I think one of the main problems
with Petrou Ralli is the back gate.
-
In theory your interview should take place
-
from 3 up to 6 months after you applied for asylum.
-
In most of the cases it's not like that.
-
It could be like 2 years before you have your first interview.
-
So they have to come and renew their pink cards
-
every 3 to 6 months.
-
So they come at 6 o'clock in the morning
-
they wait outside behind the grills.
-
If it's raining, if it's snowing, if it's 40 degrees,
-
they have to wait there.
-
So at 2:30 or 3 a cop or two come back and
-
they call names without keeping any confidentiality at all.
-
So, they are given their pink cards,
-
but sometimes they also give rejections or positives.
-
Mostly rejections,
-
because I've never heard of any positive decision actually.
-
So, they call names,
-
They will bring in and out about 10 or 20 people.
-
The point is, they will not translate the whole decision.
-
They will just tell them:
-
'You leave the country'
-
'You, fuck off'
-
or: 'You're done with asylum'
-
or: 'You didn't convince anyone with your lies.'
-
In these situations, extremist groups take advantage.
-
They find fertile ground to take advantage.
-
The racist people, their community, it's called racist people,
-
they don't like black people.
-
They broke the windows, you see.
-
They were throwing stones at the house
-
and we were sleeping inside.
-
They were staying here like ten minutes,
-
and with the police also here.
-
They don't do nothing you see.
-
They were more than fifty people, shouting...
-
'Go, go back to your country black people.'
-
They stabbed one boy from here to here.
-
The boy wanted to die.
-
When I saw the boy yesterday, the boy started to tell me
-
that Golden Dawn wanted to kill him.
-
Because they don't want foreigners.
-
They call themselves nazi, nazi group.
-
Chrysi Avgi, or Golden Dawn is an extreme right party.
-
In the 2012 elections, they won 18 out of 300 seats
-
in the Greek parliament with 7 % of the vote.
-
Mobile phone footage published online
-
shows Golden Dawn supporters singing their anthem
-
and giving nazi salutes.
-
A neo-nazi party, a nazi sympathising party
-
in a territory, in a part of the world
-
where the nazis caused huge pain only a few decades ago,
-
it doesn't logically make any sense, it can't really exist.
-
According to the records of the Hellenic Statistical Authority
-
when the Second World War began
-
The Greek population was 7,344,000.
-
By the time the War ended our population was 6,805,000.
-
Manolis Glezos, who is a Syriza MP, has a seat in parliament
-
he, with his friend in 1941, climbed onto the Acropolis
-
and pulled down the swastika and put up the Greek flag.
-
And he has to sit in the parliament with neo-nazis!
-
It's an extraordinary situation.
-
Golden Dawn is an originally fascist organisation
-
It has connections with all the fascist parties all over Europe
-
and the whole world, even the Ku Klux Klan.
-
Opinion polls at the end of 2012 show growing support
-
for Golden Dawn, placing them third.
-
The following mobile phone clip was filmed at a
-
Golden Dawn meeting in Perama, on the outskirts of Athens.
-
We received complaints concerning local problems
-
in Keratsini due to Egyptians.
-
But we say that from now on they will give account for
-
their actions to Golden Dawn and to the Greek citizens.
-
The day after that meeting, Egyptians are gathered
-
in Perama at the home of some fishermen.
-
Egyptians never had bad relations with the Greeks,
-
in fact, quite the opposite.
-
But recently the far right party Golden Dawn has been
-
on the rise, with its aggression towards foreigners.
-
This is the car we use for work.
-
My family and I were sleeping in the house,
-
at around 3:10 am we heard our
-
doors and windows being broken.
-
I opened the window and saw more than 10-15 people
-
with Golden Dawn written on their t-shirts.
-
Each one of them had at least one of these metal batons.
-
They forgot this.
-
If you hit someone over the head
with this, you could kill them.
-
And we don't know why they are doing this to us Egyptians.
-
I have been here for 20 years, I pay my taxes.
-
They came from there,
-
from that street.
-
They came down and saw that
-
one of the Egyptian fishermen was sleeping here.
-
This is his blood.
-
And then we heard the man shout 'Come! Help me, help me!'
-
We went upstairs onto the roof,
-
up there,
-
and we couldn't see his face,
-
so much blood that we couldn't see his face.
-
This is inhuman of them
-
when will this end?
-
This is very sad, unbelievable,
-
about 7-800 attacks, and many, many attacks to kill people.
-
And there is a kind of pattern in these attacks:
-
many people going together,
-
attacking one migrant
-
using dogs to intimidate them...
-
They start telling the dog to chase us:
-
'Take him! Take him!'
-
And they were laughing, they were happy.
-
They go to the areas where the immigrants live
-
and they wait for them especially late at night
-
and then 3 or 4 or 5 of them attack one.
-
They were many, they grabbed me
-
started beating me.
-
So, in a sense, it's not random
-
I think it must be organised in that sense.
-
Some days were very heavy for us,
-
in one day, about 31 people were in hospital.
-
They are injured with broken legs and hands and open heads.
-
I have seen personally people who have been
-
beaten in the face, in the head.
-
And they were afraid to come immediately,
-
they were beaten on a Saturday,
-
and they would come midweek, the next week.
-
Because they were afraid to circulate in the town.
-
'Hey mavros!' that's: 'Hey black, hey black!'
-
How do I know that it is the Golden Dawn?
-
I just ask them: Who hit you? And they say:
-
White people, wearing black clothes with the signs.
-
The people who chase immigrants
-
when they see them on the road,
-
they always have something, a sign, of Golden Dawn.
-
And if you hear their spots on TV,
-
they threaten Greek people who might be helping
-
in any way, even speaking with an immigrant,
-
they threaten them as well.
-
Our dead brother's name was Shehzad Luqman.
-
He had been living in Peristeri for the last four years.
-
He was going to his job on his bike.
-
And they were waiting there and when he got there
-
they pulled out their knives, their weapons,
-
and they killed our brother.
-
Perpetrators of racist attacks are rarely apprehended
-
however on this occasion it was different.
-
A taxi driver saw the whole thing
-
and he called the police.
-
Every minute he called them:
-
They're now here, they're now turning...
-
From the spot of the murder to Syntagma.
-
For 35 or 40 minutes he was following them.
-
At last at Syntagma, they were arrested.
-
And there was the knife, with blood, they found it on them.
-
In the home of one of the suspects the police also found
-
a selection of weapons and Golden Dawn literature.
-
And now the police does not accept that it was an attack
-
with racist and nationalist motivation.
-
The law never arrested them.
-
It was the effort of the taxi driver.
-
A very brave man, and I salute this person.
-
Every day in broad daylight there are attacks,
-
on buses or in the streets,
-
where Greek citizens intervene and call the police,
-
when there's an attack on an immigrant.
-
And police have shown up and have arrested the immigrants
-
and sometimes they even harass and arrest the Greek people.
-
Everywhere where an attack is happening, there is always
-
a car, or a cycle, or a policeman walking,
-
like they didn't see anything.
-
One attack, even the police was near there,
-
they did nothing, they were talking...
-
They acted like they didn't see me.
-
I have a friend, a black one, who works with me,
-
and suddenly a car stopped
-
and four people came out of the car, they attacked him.
-
And the police was there, he was calling the police,
-
and they were looking, they didn't move.
-
And they let the car go.
-
They said: 'Oh, we cannot do anything for you.'
-
There is no accountability from the police.
-
And there is no accountability from the Greek state.
-
From the police, from the government
-
they have an open permit.
-
What you have here is a state that has a
-
clear continuity with a totalitarian regime.
-
We have to remember that Greece had a dictatorship,
-
that ended in 1974 officially, but there was a transition
-
and not a rupture into the post-dictatorial state,
-
into the democratic state.
-
When the junta fell in 1974
-
the police force was never really cleaned up
-
and so the police force in Greece doesn't really operate
-
to serve and protect the people
-
the way it should in a democratic society.
-
I've been beaten by fascists several times.
-
I've been beaten by police more times than beaten by fascists,
-
since 1973 and the revolt against the dictatorship.
-
It was about 11 o'clock in the morning
-
and we heard some voices outside
-
and we found out that there was
-
one policeman in plain clothes and one in uniform
-
beating an immigrant.
-
We started shouting from the windows,
-
things like: 'Stop these racist attacks!'
-
In a second, there were about 30 policemen,
-
25-30 policemen, riot police,
-
coming from the one side of the road
-
and about 15 other people from the other side of the road.
-
Later we discovered that they were members of Golden Dawn.
-
They took the immigrant away.
-
And they all gathered outside the front door of our offices,
-
started shouting at us.
-
In the beginning saying that 'You have to come down'
-
and 'You give protection to illegal
immigrants and we're going to arrest you'
-
and the other ones shouting: 'We won't just arrest you'
-
'We will' ok 'fuck you!'
-
Some of them were saying: 'We will turn you into soap'
-
the fascist, nazi slogan.
-
It was a terrifying thing.
-
Not just because there were the fascists there,
-
but because together with the fascists were policemen
-
in uniforms, officially showing that they were policemen
-
being in a kind of delirium,
-
crazy, beating, shouting, swearing...
-
The police, they ask me: 'Where is your paper?'
-
When I give them my papers they ask me:
-
'Is this the paper?' - they cut it.
-
And they put it like this and say: 'This is not a paper'
-
I said: 'You are the ones who gave me that paper!'
-
They attack me, the police.
-
And then they remove my shirt, I'm there with no shirt on.
-
They look at me and say: 'Take him to the police'
-
'He doesn't have papers.'
-
They take me to the police, although I have papers.
-
After nine hours they let me go.
-
We have also testimonies by people
-
who have been attacked by the police.
-
The police beat you like animals, they beat you like animals.
-
We have people who come
-
who have been hit by clubs by the police.
-
Omonia is an Athens neighbourhood
-
with a large migrant community.
-
I was walking through Omonia
-
and I heard a lot of screaming and shouting
-
and I saw an immigrant being arrested by two policemen
-
with their scarves over their face.
-
And he fell to the ground and they picked him up by his legs,
-
he was in handcuffs,
-
and they started dragging him along the ground.
-
And I took my mobile phone out and started filming.
-
At which point they turned their attention on me
-
and surrounded me
-
and an argument followed demanding my phone.
-
And I was arrested and taken to the police station for the day.
-
Police have a permanent presence,
checking papers and arresting people.
-
At a street corner in Omonia police are detaining
-
foreigners suspected of being in the country illegally.
-
The detainees wave at the camera, motioning to get closer.
-
You take photo?
-
We are press.
-
But the police object to the recording of their actions.
-
Yeah, but you take photo?
-
You can't take photo, you know.
-
Close the camera please.
-
The police have no right to prevent you from filming
-
or taking pictures in public spaces.
-
We're being stopped.
-
Are you journalists?
-
Yes, we are journalists, we're from London.
-
It is illegal recording police.
-
Policemen have no right to request any photographic
-
data from your memory card or video camera.
-
It's explicitly prohibited.
-
If you take video, delete the video.
-
They have no right at all to touch your stills or video camera.
-
Get your hand off my camera!
-
Get your camera down.
-
I'm allowed to film.
-
Get your hand off my camera!
-
And there's been a very serious development a few months ago
-
when a group of demonstrators including women
-
were arrested and held in detention and tortured.
-
They went on motorbikes through some of the areas in Athens
-
that have high immigrant populations,
-
where Golden Dawn have been literally terrorising people
-
to show that we Greek citizens or Greek people
-
are in solidarity with immigrants and we don't accept
-
that our neighbourhoods are being
taken over and dominated by neo-nazis.
-
They were hitting them, they were slapping
them, they were spitting at them,
-
they were using them as ashtrays.
-
When I went there and saw them I was shocked
-
by what I saw, by the beatings.
-
These heavy bruises are not inflicted by one hit.
-
These are repeated hits with different instruments and means
-
in the same body parts.
-
That can only happen if you intend to ...
-
... to inflict severe pain on someone,
-
if you want to torture them.
-
What we heard from the 15 arrested people is that
-
the policemen who were doing all these things to them
-
openly claimed that they are members of the Golden Dawn.
-
What was transferred to me was that
-
the most terrifying thing was that other policemen
-
were filming on their cell phones, their mobile phones,
-
saying that they will use these videos and photographs
-
to give them to Golden Dawn.
-
The official line of the police is
that nothing like that happened.
-
And what has happened now in my reading is that
-
the Golden Dawn has come in as a kind of a backup,
-
one of the last few backups the state has,
-
to impose fear on its citizens, on its subjects
-
and to continue existing and ruling as before.
-
Fear is not an option.
-
The people must understand that, we must not fear them.
-
If we let them scare us and terrorise us, then they win.
-
This must not happen.
-
People should fight back, people should resist.
-
The people have the power to do so.
-
In June 2012 97 year-old Katina Sifakaki
-
leads a march against Golden Dawn through Athens.
-
She has fought fascism once before,
during the Second World War,
-
when she was part of the Greek resistance.
-
The people were united, they put aside
every difference they had between them.
-
In April 2012 a few hundred people
joined a protest against Golden Dawn.
-
Since then thousands have taken to the streets
-
to protest against racist attacks,
-
in solidarity with refugees and migrants.
-
These groups, antifascists, the left wing
-
are hope for the immigrants.
-
There's been a very very strong and diverse response
-
which you don't see reported in the international media
-
on the really local level,
-
in neighbourhoods and squares all over Greece.
-
We're going to come together and protest
-
against these deranged murderous fascists.
-
We are not afraid of them.
-
Greek society is a freedom-loving, democratic
-
and spontaneous society.
-
There's no money left to run even the most basic of services.
-
You don't have any money to run hospitals properly,
-
or kindergartens or anything.
-
Even the most primary, the most basic infrastructures
-
for peoples' everyday lives are not there anymore.
-
Greek doctors have been instructed in a directive
-
to not treat undocumented migrants.
-
I used to work in a hospital about a year ago
-
and we had that instruction but we never followed it.
-
Because as doctors we have sworn to help people.
-
We use a mobile clinic.
-
And they were treating people near a Golden Dawn office.
-
And they were out on the balcony and showing like:
-
'We will get you' to us, who are doctors!
-
In a lot of the international media the Golden Dawn
-
is portrayed as somewhat anti-systemic, maybe,
-
as a party trying to create some sort of rupture,
-
some sort of radical change,
-
while essentially they are the continuation
-
of mainstream politics by other means.
-
Before the last elections, you saw
speeches for instance by Samaras
-
even going as far as saying: 'We
need to clean Greece of immigrants'
-
The kind of terms that sort of point to ethnic cleansing
-
which is exactly the sort of language that Golden Dawn use.
-
When Samaras was saying for example:
-
'We have to clean the streets from immigrants'
-
Golden Dawn was getting out and started
hitting immigrants in the streets.
-
The prime minister's choice of words 'to clean the streets'
-
draws a direct parallel between migrants and dirt or litter.
-
Speaking of migrants in terms of disease,
-
natural disaster or infestation,
-
bears the implicit message that they are a threat to society.
-
People are moving, they're desperate
-
because of violations of human rights,
-
because of poverty, because of climate change,
-
for all these reasons, people are moving.
-
I get into the country and they give me a paper:
-
In thirty days you should leave the country.
-
I don't know where to go now, after thirty days,
-
I should leave the country, go back to Somalia...
-
We've had like 10 people coming from
-
Iran, Afghanistan or Iraq in 2000.
-
And now we have thousands of them.
-
It's not something that happened by accident.
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We didn't leave them any choice back
in their countries, so they came here.
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Most of them did not really want to come to Greece.
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I really want to be in any country better than this.
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We are not animals, we are human beings.
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We can walk, we can eat, we can talk.
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So please, I'm begging the two of you now,
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anybody who will see us on here, tell them
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Not Synced
we ask them that they should allow us to go, please!