This is the real face of economic collapse.
Mothers
forced to sell their children: Mail reveals the distressing human
toll of Greece's Euro meltdown
The
economic crisis across Europe has perhaps been most keenly felt in
Greece, where people have taken to the streets in violent and
emotional protests against the austeriy measures imposed on the
nation.
In
this heartbreaking dispatch from the streets of Athens, SUE REID
finds mothers who have been forced to sell their own children in the
battle for survival.
11
May, 2012
Once
a month, usually on a Saturday, Kasiani Papadopoulou packs a bag with
children’s presents and takes the bus from her one-bedroom flat in
a dusty suburb of Athens up into the cool hills outside the Greek
capital that overlook the sea.
The
20-mile journey is an emotional one for her, but she would not stop
making it for anything in the world.
A
young widow of 30, she travels to see her two daughters and son —
aged 14, 13 and 12. Kasiani was forced to give them away a year ago
when her money ran out and she was unable to pay for their food, her
rent or send them to school with shoes or books.
Effects
of austerity: Juliana Tsivra with her mother Maria. Maria used to
work in a bakery but lost her job more than a year ago
At
the charity home where the three are now cared for, the children
excitedly shout ‘Mama’ as they run down the steps to greet her.
Her eldest daughter, Ianthe, hugs her tightly and gives her a kiss.
When,
a few hours later, it is time to say goodbye, Kasiani is always close
to tears. The youngest, Melissa and Markos, cling to her before she
leaves to go home alone.
‘It
is not easy for a mother to leave her kids,’ she says to me, her
voice cracking with emotion when I spoke to her this week in Athens.
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‘At
Christmas, at Easter, on their birthdays, I am always so sad because
I do not see them. Some people judge me over what I’ve done —
even my own family and neighbours — but they do not understand the
truth. I’ve done what is best for my children.
‘I
cannot count the number of doorbells I have rung of government
departments, asking officials to help me and my family. They make
promises but do nothing. They have no money either. Our country is in
crisis.’
Tough
times: Maria Tsvira, pictured with her daughter Juliana, is now
forced to use the charity medical centre set up in Athens
Kasiani’s
children were born in a country which has been brought to its knees
by crushing debt. This was built up by Greece’s huge profligacy
after joining the European Union and then milking the system for
everything it could get.
The
public sector wage bill doubled in the past decade as perks and
fiddles reminiscent of Britain in the union controlled 1970s
flourished. Paying taxes became optional for the middle and upper
classes and corruption was rife.
Until
two years ago, the big fat Greek gravy train carried on racing
towards the buffers. Even pastry chefs and hairdressers were listed
among the 600 ‘professions’ allowed to retire at 50 (with a state
pension of 95 per cent of their final year’s earnings) on account
of the ‘arduous and perilous’ nature of their work.
Now
drastic austerity measures imposed by Eurozone finance leaders mean
that benefits, state pensions and pay rates have been pared to the
bone as taxes are hiked heavenwards in a last ditch attempt to
balance the books and stop the country going bankrupt.
For
example, the threshold at which personal tax has to be paid has been
reduced to £3,000 a year, while Vat has soared to 23 per cent.
There is a new annual levy on private property which costs the
average homeowner £1,000 a year.
Even
charities, including the one running the complex for 55 children
where Kasiani Papadopoulou’s three now live, have been forced to
hand over some of their donations to the empty Greek state coffers.
The
price of such austerity, say many here in Greece, is too high to pay,
because whatever tough measures are introduced, they will never cover
the massive national debt of £366 billion, even with the help of
the two bailout packages worth a combined £184 billion coughed up
by other EU countries, including Britain.
A
sign of the Greeks’ belligerent refusal to face up to reality is
the rise of a grassroots movement called ‘We Won’t Pay’ that
encourages the middle classes to break the law by taking public
transport without validating their ticket or driving through tolls
without paying. ‘We have already paid through our taxes so we
should be able to travel for nothing,’ claims Konstantinos
Thimianos, a 36-year-old activist protesting on the streets of
Athens.
He
wears a yellow vest with ‘total disobedience’ emblazoned on his
back and, with other activists, chants: ‘We won’t pay for their
crisis.’
Such
opposition to the austerity measures is growing. In this week’s
parliamentary elections, Greeks rejected the moderate parties that
support the hard-line policies imposed by the EU.
Already,
one in five adults is out of work, a fifth of Greek firms have
closed, the standard of living has fallen by 20 per cent in two
years, and the country which created the Olympic Games in 700 BC can
only afford to send half of its athletic team to compete in the
London Games.
In
the leafy suburbs of Athens this week, I watched two smartly dressed
elderly men rifling through rubbish bins at the side of a busy road.
One,
who said his name was Georges, told me that their state pensions had
been cut to £220 a month. He said: ‘We are looking for anything we
can sell.’
He
walked away sheepishly with a dented silver picture frame he had
found in the bin.
Meanwhile,
Government health spending has been slashed by a third. This means
that medical care is no longer free for those who have not paid full
national insurance contributions. Half of routine prescription drugs
are in short supply.
No
wonder that the queues at the Social Mission, a charity clinic set up
this year by volunteer doctors and the Archbishop of Athens in the
centre of the city, lengthen each day. In three months, 650 uninsured
patients, many of them children, have come for treatment.
One
regular visitor is Maria Tsivra, 37, a divorcee and mother of a
five-year-old girl called Juliana who needs routine vaccinations and
fortnightly doctor’s appointments to treat a throat infection.
Maria
is the daughter of an Athenian shopkeeper and used to work in a
bakery. She comes from a hard-working family but lost her job more
than a year ago, as the crisis started, and she took time off to care
for her ill daughter.
‘The
financial crisis was just an excuse to sack me. The bakery was facing
more taxes and had less customers.
‘I
was a victim like thousands of others in other jobs,’ she says in a
solemn voice.
She
and Juliana are staying for free in a friend’s house. She has no
national insurance and no money to pay £40 for an appointment with a
private doctor. ‘I cannot afford for Juliana to see the doctor or
get her medicines. That’s why I’ve come to the Social Mission.’
More
dramatically, she says: ‘I need help, but not as much as some who
are even selling their children on the streets.’
Crisis:
Greece has been brought to its knees by crushing debt which has
plunged it into political and economic turmoil
She
tells of a friend, a single mother who lived in a charity shelter
with her baby daughter because she had no money and the State would
not help.
‘She
could not afford to keep her own child and gave her away to a couple
who did not have a family of their own.
‘These
kinds of things are happening now in Greece. There are many who are
suffering and I wonder what the future holds for children of my
daughter’s generation.’
The
fate of once-booming Greece is changing fast. Soup kitchens are
commonplace. The destitute wander the streets.
At
three in the afternoon, on the sizzling Wednesday this week, I
watched Father John, a 34-year-old priest from the Greek Orthodox
Church, presiding over a long queue of Athenians, mixed with African
and Arab migrants, in a square off Sophocles’ Street.
They
were each waiting for charity workers to give them a bowl of lentils
and a piece of bread. This area of Athens was, until a few years ago,
a thriving financial sector. It is now home to cheap take-away food
stalls and shabby shops offering to buy impoverished Athenian’s
gold trinkets and jewellery.
Father
John says he has never witnessed such poverty. ‘Only today I was
helping a young couple, both 24, who are having their first baby. It
is due any time now,’ he explains.
‘They
went to the hospital this morning and the doctors said they had to
pay a fee for the birth of their child. But they have no money, and
can barely pay their rent at a small flat they share with friends.
‘The
father used to be a professional footballer, the mother an office
clerk. Now they are jobless. The mother suggested to doctors that she
had a Caesarean.’
Such
operations are considered emergencies (because they are done to save
a baby’s life) and are therefore carried out without charge. So
their request for a Caesarean was a way of getting round the rules.
However, the doctors refused.
‘They
said the Caesarean was unnecessary and she should have a normal birth
and pay for it herself. They also warned that she would have to leave
the hospital in labour if she did not find the cash to pay.
‘She
rang our church in horror and distress. We sent money to the hospital
so she can have her baby.’
Church
charity workers hand out 2,500 free meals a day in central Athens.
Among the throng waiting for Father John’s hand-outs last week was
Maria Sissmani, a beautifully dressed 82-year-old wearing designer
glasses and with tinted hair.
She
worked in Germany as a seamstress in the fashion industry for years
and her only income is 208 euros (£172) a month, a pension paid by
the Government there.
She
gets nothing from her native Greece. Yet she counts her blessings.
Her father, who ran a carpentry business, left her an office in a
building near Sophocles’ Street where she sleeps on a mattress next
to the empty desks. ‘I want to rent the office out, but because of
the crisis that is difficult.
No
one is doing business so no one needs an office. I have nothing, only
debts, and the church told me not to be too proud to join the food
queue. I do not feel so bad about it, for I am not alone,’ she says
with a sad smile as she looks at the Greek men, women and children,
hungrily waiting too.
Across
the city, a shelter run by a charity called Klimaka provides meals
and an occasional bed to the homeless. Many here are middle-aged and
middle class like George Barkouris, a former radio producer and
computer engineer.
A
divorcee, George worked all his life until the Greek troubles began.
When he lost his job because of the cutbacks, he soon ran out of
money to pay his rent on a flat in Patissia, a middle-class
neighbourhood of Athens. He was reluctant to ask his daughter, a
doctor, for help.
‘I
walked out of the flat with nothing. For the first week I slept in
the park on a bench. It was a terrible shock. Like many Greeks, I
felt angry, then depressed. I am 60, and need to work for another
five years before I qualify for even a small State pension,’ he
says.
‘When
I plucked up courage and came here for help I got a big surprise. I
found doctors, scientists, all the professional classes, were here,
too.
‘Now
this charity gives me a bed, and in return, I run their website. But
there are plenty like me still sleeping in the park. They are called
the ‘new homeless’ who once had money, a lifestyle, a career. Now
they are ruined.’
Just
what will happen next is anyone’s guess. At the SOS Children’s
Villages, a worldwide charity with a network of homes and social
centres in Greece, which cares for Kasiani Papadopoulou’s three
children, they believe things will get worse.
Over
the past year, 1,000 Greek families have turned to SOS for help,
two-thirds with huge money problems.
The
numbers are way up and the families from every walk of life. One
toddler attending a nursery school where the fees had always been
paid by her mother, was recently abandoned in with a note saying: ‘I
will not return to get Anna. I don’t have any money. I can’t
bring her up. Sorry.’
It
is the sort of case where SOS picks up the pieces. The national
director of SOS, George Protopapas, predicts: ‘Next year I fear
that more middle class families will fall into poverty here. I think
this is just the beginning and we will have many knocks on our door.’
As
for widow and mother Kasiani, she prays that one day she will be able
to afford to get her children back. Her decorator husband, Angelo,
died at the age of 47 of pneumonia — at exactly the same time as
Greece’s economic problems began.
She
took two jobs to make ends meet, one in the local Town Hall and
another in a shop owned by a middle-class family in the town. She was
cleaning all hours God sent.
Then
the work ran out. Cleaners became a luxury.
‘I
had to tell my children that I could not afford to keep them. I buy
them those little things that only a mother knows they want. I do my
best for them when I see them, although I have next to nothing.
‘But
my life has no meaning without my children. I blame the Greek
government for the catastrophe that has struck our family.’
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