Rushes from Greece — ALANYA close motorway toll collection

Members of the Solidarity, Disobedience and Resistance movement (ALANYA) carry out an action at the hated Athens motorway toll. The toll was introduced to pay for the road. The activists argued that the toll was illegal as the road had been paid for many times over. So they regularly close several lanes and then wave traffic through the remaining open ones without paying. The actions usually go unchallenged by the authorities and are extremely popular with motorists.

See slideshow.


March 29: Toll road action, inside the hospitals, vicious racism from the Greek state

A busy day started at 7:30am with Alanya (“Solidarity, disobedience,resistance”) opening up the toll booths on one of the major roads into Athens. The road they chose is in private hands, sold off after the Greek people had already paid for it.

The day before, the government announced plans to imprison people for three to six months if they open the toll booths. The group said that they would continue the actions when the bill becomes law, and are prepared to go to prison to stop the rich making profits out of what should be public services. They also said that the government’s response shows how effective actions like this are- in the past year, 50 million euros worth of toll charges has gone uncollected .

Alanya then took me to visit one of the local street markets where one of them had a stall selling shoes. Before the crisis this was a busy bustling market; now it is practically deserted, as most people can no longer afford to shop, even at cheap places like this. When I asked the street traders what they thought the solution was, three out of the four said simply: “revolution”.

Then on to Nikea-Piraeus hospital, the busiest hospital in the country where doctors were having a rank and file union meeting. Unlike Britain, doctors here have always come from working class or lower middle class backgrounds, and their pay is much lower. Doctors earn 1500 euros a month; junior doctors only 500 euros a month at the moment. However, even these small salaries have not been paid at all since December, with many people receiving less than 20 euros a month.

Strike action by junior doctors, organised on a rank and file basis through weekly assemblies at the 35 hospitals in Athens, today finally won them the money they were owed in December. They voted to continue strike action, not only to get the wages they are owed for this year, but to get improvements in health care for the people of Athens.

Dr. Olga Kosmopolou then showed me round the hospital to see the terrible conditions. Wards have beds and patients crammed together, there are severe shortages of equipment and supplies, and patients are now forced to pay for treatment and medicines. Direct action by doctors has ensured that at least people don’t have to pay the 5 euro charge just for visiting the hospital, but medicine is a real problem. Cancer patients are being told to pay literally thousands of euros for essential medication, which means many will die over the next few years. There is now an hiv epidemic too – because there is no money for drug rehabilitation, and no supply of syringes, drug users turn to used syringes. Those who become hiv positive often turn to prostitution to buy the medication they need to survive, which is accelerating the epidemic. Meanwhile the drug companies are making a fortune.

Olga made an appeal to all workers across the continent. “We ask all our European colleagues: We have to fight together, because our present is your future.”

Finally, a nasty reminder of the darkness that could come if we don’t all fight together.  In the afternoon, police started rounding up refugees and asylum seekers to be transported to huge detention centres in the North of Greece – essentially concentration camps with no access to lawyers, no indication of how long people will be kept there, and with reports already of maltreatment and torture by police.

Most asylum seekers are here because of a European directive that returns deported asylum seekers to the country they first pass through in Europe – which is normally Greece. Obviously they don’t want to be in a country where they have no support, no chance of a job and are scared to walk the streets, but the governments of Europe, including our own, are collaborating to force everyone into these Greek concentration camps.

I talked to a worker at a refugee advice centre, who was visibly shaken today, telling me that police were trying to arrest anybody who wasn’t white, including many who either had legal status or who had actually lived in Greece for many years. Members of the openly neo-nazi Golden Dawn attacked students in universities who were attempting to give people a safe refuge – the police aren’t allowed onto university campuses, and apparently there is proof that the police and the nazis are working together.

These are the desperate actions of a government  (backed up by the European union, who have provided the money for the detention centres) trying to divert people’s anger over the austerity cuts by blaming refugees. It won’t work. The growth of the nazis is nothing compared to the huge shift to the left that is happening in Greek society. As Oil rig worker and Alanya member Jake put it, “The people aren’t afraid of the government any more. But the government are very afraid of the people.”

 

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Greece update: Peristeri neighbourhood committee

Meeting with representatives of the neighbourhood committee in the huge working class district of Peristeri last night, one of over 40 similar committees throughout Athens. Similar to the neighbourhood assemblies that sprung up in Argentina ten years ago, this one was formed in 2000 but has grown massively since the start of the crisis in Greece, accelerated by the opposition to the extra tax on electricity.

They told me (only one of us left in Greece now!) how people are starting to organise themselves, including, crucially, at a rank and file union level in the workplaces. They’ll be showing me a lot of this this week, particularly in hospitals and schools, and taking me to another strong committee in the working class community of Nea Smyrni.


Athens ALANYA motorway toll action

Members of the Solidarity, Disobedience and Resistance movement (ALANYA) carry out an action at the hated Athens motorway toll. The toll was introduced to pay for the road. The activists argued that the toll was illegal as the road had been paid for many times over. So they regularly close several lanes and then wave traffic through the remaining open ones without paying. The actions usually go unchallenged by the authorities and are extremely popular with motorists.

Photos by Guy Smallman


Round up 2: Reel New in Athens

Since the last update, we have visited the occupied TV channel Alter TV, the journalists of the newspaper Eleftherotypia, who have been on strike since December and the pickets at the steel factory Elliniki Halivourgia, with workers out on strike for four months now.

We have met actors from a radical theater company performing in squatted venues, an experimental post-punk act, and a dubstep artist.

Photo by Guy Smallman

We covered a demo and rally of hospital workers out on strike (slideshow and video rushes), and activists from Al.Any.A. (roughly translated the acronym means “little rascals” – the full name is Solidarity, Disobedience, Resistance), who blocked the toll collection on the motor way leaving Athens – eliciting huge smiles from drivers, blowing their horns in support of the action.

Today we spoke to young immigrants about the issues they face, and went down to the students parades that take place on the day before the Independence Day Parades, which is where we will go tomorrow.


Rushes from Greece — Greek health workers on strike & on the streets

Today staff from several Athens Hospitals walked out over cuts to services and their wages. A march was held through Athens while doctors protested outside the health ministry. Riot police protected the offices of the finance ministry near the start of the march. The building has been occupied by angry workers on several previous occasions. The dispute has been running for over a month with regular action by staff ranging from senior doctors to hospital cleaners.

See photo slideshow.


Greek health workers on strike & on the streets

Today staff from several Athens Hospitals walked out over cuts to services and their wages. A march was held through Athens while doctors protested outside the health ministry. Riot police protected the offices of the finance ministry near the start of the march. The building has been occupied by angry workers on several previous occasions. The dispute has been running for over a month with regular action by staff ranging from senior doctors to hospital cleaners.

Photos by Guy Smallman


The occupied TV channel

ALTER TV was until recently a respected channel specialising in news and current affairs. Staff have not been paid for a year and went into occupation from last November to prevent millionaire owner Andreas Kouris from asset stripping the redundant offices and studios. They survive off food donated by local people and businesses and also a small amount of money from their trade union. They briefly illegally broadcasted workers news and views until the Greek government shut down their transmitter. Full story coming soon from REEL NEWS.

Photos by Guy Smallman