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Happy Holidays

December 22nd, 2008

my_tree1.jpg

A very happy holiday season to everyone who reads this blog. I wish you all love, happiness and peace in your lives.

I will be running around for the next few days, doing a bit of shopping and cooking up some of the usual holiday treats. I always leave everything until the last minute but I quite like it that way. I feel that it makes this time a little more special if the decorations and presents haven’t been sitting around for months.

We, like everyone else, are being more frugal this year but we are thankful for many things that the vast majority of the world do not enjoy. We have a beautiful warm home. We have enough to feed ourselves and are able to splash out and celebrate with friends too. We have many luxuries that give us pleasure.

I am forever thankful for my family, for my friends and for all the good people that I know through this blog and in real life.

I am hoping for change, dynamism, creativity and positive action for 2009.

INCREASE THE PEACE
[Spike Lee]

Much love to all
DD

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Personal

Links Updated

December 20th, 2008

BERJAYA

I have been busy this morning cleaning up my links. I have thrown out all blogs that have been inactive for six months or more and updated a few url’s. Please let me know if your blog is missing from my list or if you have any new suggestions (yes, feel free to promote yourself).

Also, can you please try and leave a comment here. I have been having various problems (as you might know) and I am wondering if the comment issue is fixed. Just a “hello” is fine.

Thank you !

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Blogging

No More

December 18th, 2008

For all the victims of brutality and mistreatment at the hands of Greek police, coast guards and prison authorities…

BERJAYA

Alexis Grigoropoulos
Another fifteen year old boy
Fani-Yannula Petropoulou-Tsakiris
Augustinos Dimitrios
People in police custody
Roma communities
Photographers and bloggers
Asylum seekers
Children

And this is just a quick list I pulled up quickly from my blog in the past year…

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Police brutality

Open Thread 6

December 15th, 2008

I am still having a few problems with the blog and I have settled for a stable but very boring theme for now.We upgraded to the latest version but I still can’t log in “normally”. This has been one of the most difficult weeks in the technical history of this blog and definitely a time in Greece that I would liked to have been involved in. That’s not the way it worked out but at least I’m still here…

Let’s continue the “Open Thread” idea from last week. I know you have all had problems leaving any comments but if you have time to, pop in and say hello, let me know where you are, any thoughts on the current situation in Greece or anything else you feel like expressing.

Thank you all for you patience and loyality

open thread

Open Thread 5

December 9th, 2008

UPDATE: Pictures have been published of a police officer aiming a firearm at demonstrators. The photographer who took the picture for the national paper Elefteros Typos (Free Press) has subsequently been fired. Pictures are also circulating of known fascists “working” alongside the police. The situation is becoming more and more complicated. There are even people out there who are blaming immigrants for the violence ! I just don’t know what to say about the whole mess.

Also, apologies again. It seems that you are unable to leave comments for now! We’re working on it…

As I haven’t been able to post anything for a while and I am still having problems logging in,  I think the best thing to do is have another “Open Thread”. Most of you will have heard about the nights of rioting that we have been experiencing here in Greece following the death of a teenage boy, Alexandros Grigoropoulos who was shot dead by police. Teacher Dude has some excellent coverage over at his blog as well as photographs. He was interviewed on CNN yesterday too. I think he sums it up in the title of one of his latest posts, Days of Rage.

Let’s focus this “Open Thread” on these issues.

The police shot dead an unarmed fifteen year old boy. They are saying that the bullet was a ricochet from a warning shot but eye-witnesses say it was a direct hit. The postmortem results are not out at the moment. Many people believe that the officers involved will not be punished as they should be, given the track record of past cases of police brutality where they have escaped any kind of prison sentences. Again, Teacher Dude has a post on this with several examples including his own experiences of being beaten up by MAT officers.

What do you think ?

People are angry. One student who was on the protest march said

Rage is what I feel for what has happened, rage

What are the causes of this rage ? My feeling is that it is a combination of issues. Unemployment, lack of opportunity, low wages and disgust at the corruption and incompetence of the government. I believe, like many others commenting on this situation, that the death of the Alexandros was the straw that broke the camel’s back.

What do you think ?

All comments are welcome as long as you follow my Comment Policy. I have posted the main guidelines below as a reminder:

ONE:
People commenting for the first time will need approval from me before their comment will appear. This will hopefully prevent people who repeatedly violate my comment rules from changing their names and coming back for another hit. (yes, I know who you are).

TWO:
People who have approved comments will automatically be able to post whenever they wish. Friends and allies of this blog are always welcome. People wanting to discuss the issues in a civil and respectful way are always welcome. New visitors are always welcome and will have posting privileges once they have a comment approved.

THREE:
People who attack and insult people personally on this blog will have their names dropped into my moderation list. This is so that if you have something to say (yes, even if you disagree with me!) and you say it without rudeness and name-calling, I can approve it once I’ve seen it.

FOUR
People who continue to ignore my repeated requests for respect and civility on this blog will go on the banned list. No discussion. No cries of censorship. You will just be banned.

If your comment does not appear as soon as you hit send, it does not mean that you are banned. It might mean that I haven’t had a chance to read through the comments and approve them. I do get a fair amount of spam and sometimes comments slip into the spam list instead of moderation.

I still reserve the right to delete any comment that I consider necessary to remove even if you have had other comments approved.

ALL COMMENTS ALLUDING TO OLD PERSONAL ATTACKS ON THIS BLOG WILL ALSO BE DELETED.

Thank you.

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open thread

Blog Problems

December 9th, 2008

I haven’t been able to log in to my blog for a while now. The server I am on was hacked and someone messed about with the passwords and permissions apparently. Why would someone do that ? My blog guru vegankid is working on it but everything is a bit hit and miss at the moment. Some of my funky plugins don’t seem to be working or they might actually be causing the problems in the first place. What does this all means for you ? Only that some features that I used to have here are no longer active. I will try and activate my favorite ones over the next few days and we’ll see what happens. Let me know if you notice any serious problems with the blog. Thank you for your patience.

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Blogging

Out of Control

December 2nd, 2008

The German-based PRO ASYL (National Working Group for Refugees) conducted research into Greece’s asylum procedures between October 20th and 28th 2008. The following report details the findings of Karl Kopp, the Director of European Affairs. I wanted to post it in full but I don’t have the time to clean up the formatting in the pdf to make it readable on the blog.

Please take the time to download and read the article in full. It is pretty shocking to see the absolute failure of the asylum “procedure” here in Greece laid out in a single document. From simply being unable to cope to absolute obstruction, police brutality and illegal activity.

If you have any problems, downloading or viewing the article, please contact me at thedeviousdiva and I will send you an unformatted text document.

Some introductory things that I would like to point out from the document (sorry about the format problems!):

Greece is unable to meet current asylum requirements

For months, thousands of protection seekers had tried in vain to claim asylum. They were
turned away. “Come back in two months,“ asylum seekers were told at the entrance. This policy of closed doors means that people wishing to claim asylum cannot enter the building and, therefore, have no access to asylum procedures. As a result, people seeking protection are at risk of arrest.

On 27.10.2008, the Greek Ombudsman published a 13-page document showing how access to asylum is denied or obstructed. The current “humanitarian crisis” says the report, has, above all, exposed the impotence and structural shortcomings of the Greek administration.This “structural malfunction” was particularly incomprehensible because Greece had been processing refugee and migrant claims for some 15 years now. Coincidentally, an Ombudsman delegation visited Petrou Ralli Street on 3.10.2008 and found that the Central Immigration and Asylum Authority had ceased to accept asylum applications for “an unspecified period“. The Ombudsman had already criticised the obstruction of access to asylum procedures in a number of previous reports. Asylum seekers had a basic right to enter the building and use asylum procedures. Refusals to accept asylum applications placed those seeking protection in great danger. These individuals faced arrest and deportation. The centralised Greek system for asylum applications and processing “ran completely counter to the basic principle of political asylum“.

In Greece, individual reasons are not given for rejecting asylum applications. A study carried out by the UNHCR has proved that negative decisions never refer to the reasons why asylum was requested. There is no discussion of the facts, no detailed legal reasoning. In 2007, 25,113 asylum applications were filed in Greece. A first instance decision was issued in 20,692 cases. In 20,684 cases, the decision was negative. Refugee status was granted in just eight cases. In a further 52 cases “humanitarian status“ was extended. This status must be extended annually. The Greek Ministry of the Interior, for its part, includes such extensions in its statistics but the UNHCR does not include them in its recognition rate data.

and on and on and on. Please download and read this. I will try and post other details from the file over the next few days (if I have the chance.).. but you could just download it and read !

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Personal

World Aids Day

December 1st, 2008

BERJAYA

Today is World Aids Day

From Avert, an international Aids charity based in the UK.

According to UNAIDS estimates, there are now 33.2 million people living with HIV, including 2.5 million children. During 2007 some 2.5 million people became newly infected with the virus. Around half of all people who become infected with HIV do so before they are 25 and are killed by AIDS before they are 35.

Around 95% of people with HIV/AIDS live in developing nations. But HIV today is a threat to men, women and children on all continents around the world.

Started on 1st December 1988, World AIDS Day is about raising money, increasing awareness, fighting prejudice and improving education. World AIDS Day is important in reminding people that HIV has not gone away, and that there are many things still to be done.

Please take at least one action today. This is just one suggestion out of the hundreds of things you can do: Stop Aids in Children Campaign

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Activism

Injustice

November 25th, 2008

[UPDATE: Apologies for yesterday. The site was down for some strange reason but seems to have been resolved today. I have no idea why. These things happen...]

Διαγόρας ο Μήλιος sent me an article last week that he had read at Ροΐδη Εμμονές (in Greek) and very kindly did the translation for me. This story has received very little coverage in the mainstream media.

Today is the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women

From the newspaper Avgi published on the 11th of November

When an immigrant falls from the balcony

The employer of a hired worker pushed her off the second floor of her house according to the Greek chapter of the World March of Women and the Athens Feminist Center.

The 22 year old Ethiopian was taken half-dead to the Gennimatas hospital where she has been bedridden ever since. According to the report, the police has accepted the employer’s version of the story, namely that the girl fell from the second floor in order to escape her job and the deportation order against her. The girl was guarded by two police officers inside the hospital while she is still confined to bed.

The reporting parties stress that the husband of the employer is an officer of the Lebanon-based Consolidated Contractors International Company and that the company supported the aforementioned story.

The girl was working for 100 dollars per month which was not being given to her, while her travel documents had been illegally withheld from her. The report speaks of crime concealment.

The reporting parties demand that the girl not be removed from the hospital before her health is restored, that her deportation be canceled, that the employers responsible for pushing her off the balcony be punished and that she is financially compensated.

The weekly publication «Εποχή» mentioned the story, enriching it with more information:

The migrant who had been hired from Dubai as a nanny for the children of her employers, is hospitalised in poor condition in Gennimatas hospital and is guarded by police. Her name is Ali Zahira Mohamed. The company which employed the husband of the perpetrator has returned her passport which he had been holding illegally. The police, rather than protect the victim, have sided with the Palestinian perpetrators who, due to negligence, have managed to leave the country. The girl lives
today thanks to the care of the Ethiopian community in Athens and Greek women.

Meanwhile a question to the Ministers of Interior and Health was tabled by SYRIZA M.P. Anna Filini.
The MP notes the contradictions of the police who claim that she was arrested on the 15th of October (she was already hospitalised). They also allege that she had entered the country illegally (she had a valid visa) and say that she did not object to being deported (she is bedridden).

Anyone interested in communicating can contact Sonia Mitralia (sonia.mitralia@gmail.com) of World March of Women and Sisy Vovou (svovou@otenet.gr) of Feminist Center of Athens.

[I must point out that there were grammatical mistakes in the original articles which Διαγόρας noted to me so the translation is a little awkward in places through no fault of his]

Women

Migrant Hunger Strike Update

November 24th, 2008

I posted last week about two hunger strikes. One in the country’s prisons which has now ended with some positive results.
The other is ongoing in Hania (also written Chania) in Crete where a group of migrants are protesting their treatment here and are trying to obtain legal status. Here is a the first public statement from the group:

We are migrants, members of Crete Forum of Immigrants, living in Greece. We entered the country illegally, as the majority of immigrants do, since the political and institutional regime in Greece does not allow people seeking a better life in Greece to stay legally there, in the country, that is, where they live, work, and raise their children. Since we were eligible to do so, we applied for residence permits in compliance with the law currently in effect; however, residence permits were denied to us, on the pretext that our passport had been issued after 2004, although we had applied for it at our respective countries of origin embassies in Athens long before 2004. We then followed the legal process of applying for the cancellation of this reject decision in the Greek courts, but our demand was rejected all the same. Each one of us paid thousands of Euros along this process. Many cases are yet to stand a trial, and this delay forces us into “clandestine” status. For the police authorities, none of our documents has any validity, so that the prospect of finding ourselves into detention rooms or deported is extremely likely, since this has already happened for people like us. Existing migration policies and laws clearly aim at our marginalization, promoting ignorance not only of the problems we deal with, but also of our social existence as a whole. Faced with that, we decided to proceed in drastic ways and raise awareness around our issues and difficulties.
We claim the right in life and work under decent conditions. For a migration policy that will guarantee the legalization of all migrants living in Greece and a meaningful integration of them in the Greek society:

It is vital that the injustice of us being held “hostages” within an unfair legal status, cease. The current regime either excludes us from legalization processes, or threatens us with “legalization” in the terms of a Fortress Europe.

It is vital that the renewal of residence permits is disconnected from the possession of a certain number of revenue stamps. This is extremely unfair for migrant workers, for whom informal labor, with no insurance whatsoever, is the rule and the only option. This regulation forces us into buying extra revenue stamps with their cost burdening exclusively on the migrant migrant worker’s shoulders.

It is vital that the right to family unification is disconnected from proving a certain – high – annual income, since this requirement forces us into vouching virtual incomes from rural jobs – and into paying high taxation.

It is vital that the cost for the residence permit issue fees declines, and corresponds to the real cost of the bureaucratic process.

It is vital that municipalities employ more people to work in the issuing and renewal of residence permits. Furthermore, it is unacceptable that the essential information for applying is not available in the migrants’ own languages. The Forum of Migrants of Crete has long before pledged to assist Municipalities in making this possible.

It is vital that the detention and deportation of minors ceases.

It is vital that all children born in Greece are allowed to be registered in municipality tolls, obtain certificates of birth, and be granted Greek citizenship – as it happens in the rest EU states.

It is vital that international human rights conventions and treaties are respected in Greece.

We demand that residence permits are issued immediately for all those who are eligible for them according to the law (hundreds of migrants in Chania alone). This could be done either through a common sense interpretation of the existing law, or through a reformation and broadening of the acceptable ways for proving entry in the country.

We make an appeal for active and daily support and solidarity to all migrants living in Chania and the rest of Greece, to all democratic and aware Greek fellow-citizens. We want all society on our side. We need it. We expect support from political parties and members of parliament, municipalities and prefectures, Labour Union Centers and any trade union and scientific association. We ask for the support of political and cultural collectives and societies in Chania, the rest of the country and abroad, because we know that our struggle concerns everyone.
Because we know that what threatens the wider society is racism, oppression, exclusion and discrimination, not us.

Here is an account of their first ten days. I ask anyone who has a blog, website or any forum to re-post this or just post the link in support of the people involved in this hunger strike. Although, the action is extreme, it seems as though this is the only way to get the attention of the authorities. Many hundreds of ordinary citizens and the alternative media are already standing in support (as you will read). Thank you.

I have left the text uncorrected but there are a couple of spelling mistakes that could lead to misunderstanding. In the first paragraph “major” should read “Mayor”. In the second, I believe “decerebrates” should read “degenerates”. The rest of the minor errors do not affect the reading.

Tuesday, 11 November 2008.

At 5 am the hunger strike begins, 15 migrants participate. Since that moment, the struggle receives support from hundreds of people, Greek and Migrants. Their presence is impressive. The small camping of the tents where the hunger strikers are to spend the hunger strike days is set up next to the entrance of the town’s city hall. A sound system is also there, and the migrants make the best use of it virtually singing in Arabic the demands of their struggle. The major has already alerted the police authorities, although he is aware that the 9/10 migrants are “sans papiers”: he is already guilty to our eyes of consenting actively to any detention and/or deportation the hunger strikers might be subjected to. Cops and officer-cops check out regularly the situation but do not intervene.

During the next night, some decerebrates and self-proclaimed “nationalists - racists”, on motor-bikes and big ideas for themselves, assault the hunger strikers with empty glass bottles. One of the motorbikes is halted by the hunger strike’s picketers…

Thursday, 13 November 2008.

A grand demonstration takes place in Hania city centre to accompany the hunger strikers to the new setting of their struggle’s camp, in front of the Public Economic Agency facilities. The demonstrators have virtually moved the camp by lifting it on their hands (see photos)! The change of place is due to Mayor Virvidakis, a real prick, who has been very busy in machinating ways to put the migrants in the added risk of immediate detention/deportation danger – as if the hunger strike hadn’t been enough. This change of place however means no retreat for the hunger strike. On the contrary, the new setting is in the very centre of the city’s economic, commercial and administrative life (lots of shops and public services there). Not to mention that just on the other side of the road (Tzanakaki street) there is an occupied Crete Polytechnic University building, which can boost the whole thing both creatively and organizationally. The hunger strikers said “…we leave from the town hall’s entrance with our heads upright. We do so out of respect for the law, not for the mayor and his opinions. Fighters never leave the battle. They move to new positions, though, just like lions change their den”.

More and more local associations, societies, trade unions, collectives and communities express their solidatity with the hanger strikers, hundreds of signatures have already been collected for the hunger strike’s pettion.

On the same day, the hunger strikers issue a press release to express their solidarity with the then ongoing big hunger strike across the country’s prisons. In terms of participants’ numbers and organization this has been the most important prison hunger strike so far, forcing the Minister of Justice to proclaim a new draft of law, partially statisfying the hunger strikers demand. The Hania hunger strikers’ support was the natural thing to do, not least because many – if not most - of the prison hunger strikers were migrants - the number of imprisoned migrants, in Greece as anywhere, is disproportionally large.

Monday, 17 November 2008.  

The annual demonstration commemorating the student and popular revolt against the military junta (1973), became in Hania a mass manifestation of solidarity with the hunger strikers (both migrants and prisoners). About 800 hundred people supported the struggle.

The hunger strikers’ health already deteriorates, the first signs of exhaustion are apparent. No sign from the government of the Greek Polity though. Local MPs of the opposition visit the hunger strikers and express their solidarity. The local Lawyers Bar issues an announcement, supporting the migrants’ lawful demands, and denouncing the unfairness they have been subjected to by authorities.

Wednesday, 19 November 2008.

The Hania city council becomes one more arena for the migrant’s struggle, with the opposition accusing the mayor for his hostile politics against the migrants. The mayor, whose authority is directly involded in the unfair interpretation of the law against the migrants has been attacked for his overall attitude and his dirty role in putting the hunger strikers in danger, ignoring the mass wave of support within his own municipality’s electorate. Of course, this is not just a local issue, but one that relates to core values and legal regulations in Greece and Europe as a whole. But resistance should also turn against local authorities that behave the way this mayor did, they are also responsible, as the Greek governemt is for remaining silent.

The hunger strikers demand now to have a meeting in person with the Minister of Interior, to make clear their determination and demands.

Thursday, 20 November 2008.
The first hunger striker in need of hospital aid is already tested by the hunger strike’s severe consequences. He fainted and was taken to the Hania hospital.

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Migrants

Deported

November 24th, 2008

The heart-breaking story of Ziyad, an Iraqi refugee who was deported from Germany to Greece even though he had never stepped foot in this country before. He had traveled from Iraq with his brother to escape persecution and to settle with other members of his family in Germany. For some unknown reason, his brother was allowed to stay but he was deported here.

Read the full story of Ziyad with photographs at The Pickett Lens.
You can also see the photo reportage of his brother, Petrus adjusting to life in Germany.

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Refugees

Not in Our Name

November 21st, 2008

Following the widespread hunger strikes in prisons across the country protesting the appalling conditions and inhumane treatment of prisoners, bloggers and internet users have united in support. The date was actually yesterday but I missed it due to work. I still think it’s worth posting the petition and signing it anyway.

Via Flubberwinkle

Bloggers unite and fight back for Democracy and defense of basic human rights. A call in the Greek blogosphere arises, urging every blogger simultaneously to communicate, publish or sign the following text NOT IN OUR NAME

“The situation in Greek prisons is unacceptable. Radical changes in the prison system should be a first priority”.
- Karolos Papoulias, Head of State, 6/11/08

“We are human. Prisoners but still human, I tell you”.
- Vangelis Pallis, prisoner, 9/11/08

From November 3rd, all detainees in prisons throughout the country are on a hunger strike, claiming what should be respected, but is not: their lost dignity. What they face is the criminal silence of the mainstream media and the indifference of the political leadership. To this silence and political practices all we who sign this text DO NOT CONSENT.

The conditions in Greek prisons are unspeakable and may be understood only by the cold language of mathematics. In the supposedly reformatory institutions of the country a total of 417 detainee deaths were recorded over the past decade, while the rate has literally taken off to such a degree, that every month four people die in the hands of the State. Capacity in Greek prisons reaches 168% (10,113 detainees for 6019 spaces) with a ratio of minimum space for each man in some cases reaching 1square meter, while the daily public spending per prisoner is the meager 3.60 €. Prison cells are miserable, reminiscent of medieval times and health care is almost non - existent. At the same time, the Greek judicial system sends in prison one in every thousand of the overall population, while detainees without trial (in custody) are up to the 30% of the total number of prisoners. If quality of our Democratic system of governance is characterized by its prisons, then our Democracy is in crisis. If detainment is a penalty imposed for criminal behaviors by the State in the name of society, then in the case of Greek prisons we should all be accountable and most responsible of all, the Authorities. Facing such a reality all we who sign this text respond NOT IN OUR NAME.

The data revealed by official bodies for Greek prisons outline inhuman conditions of detention. According to a recent Report of the European Committee on the Prevention of Torture (2007), has found incidents of torture and inhuman treatment of prisoners, threats against their life along with series of violations in relation to their conditions of detention, deficits in investigating and punishing the perpetrators, incidents of violence in collusion with doctors and prison-guards and unacceptable health and medical care conditions. The European Court of Human Rights has issued a series of decisions, convicting the Greek state regarding abuse and / or other rights’ violations of prisoners by prison Authorities. The Greek National Commission on Human Rights has taken a decision – catapult, noting human rights’ abuses in Greek prisons and suggesting certain direct actions to resolve them. The Greek Ombudsman complains about the lack of cooperation with competent state Authorities, causing them literally to be banned from entering the country’s prisons for the last two years. The country’s bar associations, Non-Governmental Organizations, such as Amnesty International, and many political / social institutions unanimously denounce the unacceptable conditions in Greek prisons and call for greater cooperation to overcome the problem. If human rights are to be enjoyed by every human being, depriving it of detainees in Greek prisons, is an open wound for our society. In this situation those who sign this text agree to SMASH COMMUNICATION BARRIERS BETWEEN PRISONS AND SOCIETY.

Prisoners going on hunger strikes, resort to the last bastion of resistance left to them, their own life. A month before the strikes commenced, there has been a last call to the political leadership to solve their problems, as things were getting unbearable, but nothing happened. To stop the hunger strikes, prisoners have specific, realistic and decent demands that restore their lost dignity and recover their basic human rights.As a response to Greek prisoners’ mobilization the political leadership stands in indifference, acts only to make promises for the future and to repress their movements. Nevertheless, an indifferent stance of the political leadership at this stage will certainly mean dead hunger strikers. In these circumstances we say that we cannot remain passive waiting for the news of deaths from hunger strikes but we will stand by them. If the defense of democracy and human rights require the watchfulness of all of us, now is a chance for all, to take steps away from indifference and evasions of the problem.

Faced with the tension that prevails in prisons all over the country, we who sign this text consider the political leadership fully responsible for anything that will happen and demand both institutionally and in practice that BASIC HUMAN RIGHTS FOR ALL PRISONERS IN THE COUNTRY ARE GUARANTEED.”

On November, the 21st, this text will be sent in bulk to all members of the Greek parliament and to the mass media encouraging them for its republication. The text will have attached the signatures (URL hyperlinks) of all blogs, forums and web pages that adopted it. We urge for its republication and dissemination, so that the struggle of Greek prisoners for basic human rights gets the international attention and coverage, it deserves”.

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Human Rights

Update on Prison Hunger Strike

November 17th, 2008

Please read Teacher Dude on NowPublic. As far as I am concerned, Teacher Dude is doing more than anyone else on the English speaking blogs to get the word out to a wider public and his photography is remarkable. Bookmark his blog and support his work.

An update on the situation from Kathimerini

As thousands of prisoners across the country entered the seventh day of a hunger strike in protest at detention conditions, a 30-year-old inmate was in critical condition after allegedly trying to hang himself in the cell of a jail in central Greece.

Christos Tsibanis was transferred to the intensive-care unit of a hospital in Lamia yesterday after guards at Domoko Prison found him hanging in his cell. According to an organization supporting protesting prisoners, it took jail guards 40 minutes to respond to calls for help by Tsibanis’s fellow inmates. When the guards finally did arrive, they put handcuffs on the 30-year-old before transferring him to the hospital, a spokesperson for the organization said.

It was unclear whether the 30-year-old is one of some 5,500 inmates believed to be on hunger strike or whether he is a drug addict, as most inmates who attempt suicide tend to be. The death of a 32-year-old inmate in Grevena jail last week is believed to have been drug-related.

The organization supporting the prisoners is insisting on a meeting between a group of inmates and Justice Minister Sotiris Hatzigakis, who last week pledged to ease overcrowding and introduce a methadone program for heroin addicts in prison. Inmates have rejected the proposed reforms as “inadequate.”

A delegation from the Thessaloniki Bar Association, which visited the local Diavata Jail on Saturday, expressed shock at the extent of the overcrowding. Cells designed to hold four inmates are occupied by as many as 10 men, they observed. The visitors also noted serious shortages in the medical care available for inmates.

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Human Rights

Migrants on Hunger Strike

November 12th, 2008

From Kathimerini

Fifteen migrants went on hunger strike outside the town hall in Hania, Crete, yesterday to highlight the fact that they have not been given residence permits. The migrants also pitched eight tents in front of the building and said they would not leave until they have been issued the permits. Dozens of other migrants gathered to offer their support. It is estimated that some 500 migrants have submitted applications but have yet to be granted residence

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Migrants

Inmates on Hunger Strike

November 12th, 2008

From Kathimerini

Some 4,000 inmates in jails around the country went on hunger strike yesterday to demand better detention conditions, with some sewing their mouths shut to drive their point home. In addition to the inmates on hunger strike, another 4,000 continued to boycott their prisons’ mess halls for a second week.

Protesters, whose cause has been backed by the Coalition of the Radical Left (SYRIZA) and other left-wing parties, object to overcrowding and the drug dealing that goes on in many jails.

A group representing the protesters yesterday condemned the state for the drug-related death of an inmate in a jail on Chios. “People who are addicted to drugs do not belong in prison but in rehabilitation centers,” the group said.

Last week Justice Minister Sotiris Hatzigakis heralded a series of reforms aimed at improving conditions for inmates and offering additional support for the rehabilitation of drug addicts, who comprise a large proportion of inmates in Greek jails.

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Human Rights