Greece - Articoli

Fiume Acheloos

Greece: fight for the soul of the Achelous River

Gilda Lyghounis | 10 January 2013 ita

A huge project, madness for many: deviating the course of the Achelous River and have it flow into the Aegean instead of the Ionian Sea. Following the resistance of the Greek Council of State, the EU and the environmentalists, the project seemed to have been set aside for good. Now, aided by the crisis, it has come to be topical again




Atene, piazza Syntagma

“Panagulis lives”, and Greece seethes

Gilda Lyghounis | 26 November 2012 ita

Athens adopts its 2013 Budget: new cuts to convince the “troika” UE-FMI-BCE to grant the last tranche of the loan-lifesaver. Around the country, however, there's an air of violent hostility, and to disturb the parliamentarians' sleep comes the sinister warning of Stathis Panagulis, the deputy and last scion of a dynasty of martyrs




Memoriale, Distomo - F.Martino

Greece, Germany and the wounds of history

Distomo | Francesco Martino | 11 July 2012 ita

 The economic crisis in Europe is stirring up animosity and distrust, especially in places marked by the wounds of history. Like Distomo, a village in western Boeotia, where one of the worst massacres in Nazi-occupied Greece took place in 1944. Here, recriminations against Merkel's austerity pair up with claims – never met – for compensation. A report




Anti-austerity strike in Thessaloniki – 0neiros/flickr

Greece, much crisis for nothing

Francesco Martino | 18 June 2012 ita

Crises are painful, but they must be an opportunity for change. Yet in Greece, says economic analyst Janos Manolopoulos, this has not happened. Athens' political and economic leaders navigate at sight, unable to rethink the country's future




Chrysi Avghì

Greece: Chrysi Avghi, the darkest side of the crisis

Gilda Lyghounis | 19 May 2012 ita

After the failure of negotiations for a new government, Greece is going back to the polls on June 17th. Many eyes are on the neo-Nazi movement Chrysi Avghi ("Golden Dawn"), that has taken advantage of the crisis and attracted consent with violent anti-migrant rhetoric, reawakening eery ghosts from the past. A portrait of the party and its leader, Nikos Michaloliakos




Dinosaurs

The extinction of the Greek party dinosaurs?

Takis Pappas | 10 May 2012

Do PASOK and New Democracy have a future after their crashing defeat in the recent elections? According to Takis Pappas, associate professor of comparative politics at the University of Macedonia, Thessaloniki, the two parties face a rather different political fate. From OpenDemocracy




La prima pagina del quotidiano Eleftherotypia

The economic crisis shuts down Greek newspapers

Gilda Lyghounis | 31 January 2012 ita

The historic daily Eleftherotypia has not been published for over a month. It is not the only one: at least 15 newspapers in Greece have shut down or cut staff, among which is the authoritative To Vima




The ancient Via Egnatia

The Via Egnatia: bridges and walls between East and West

Fabrizio Polacco | 16 December 2011 ita

States and Empires on the rise or at the height of their power build roads and bridges, while when in decline or in danger they raise walls and barriers. A journey along the ancient Via Egnatia which connected Italy with ancient Greece, continues as far as Byzantium and now gives its name to a motorway




Ban Ki-moon meets Greek and Turkish Cypriot leaders

Cyprus: Last phase of negotiations

Francesco Grisolia | 18 November 2011 ita

Despite low expectations, the meetings between Greek and Turkish Cypriots that took place in New York on 30 and 31 October had a “positive and productive” outcome. However, some issues still need to be solved




The Piraeus

Is Greece going to be saved by China?

Gilda Lyghounis | 20 June 2011 ita

Greece has not emerged from its economic crisis. If the European Union stops signing " blank cheques” in order to save Greece, many Greeks will start hoping that China soon becomes a lifebuoy to keep them afloat. In the meantime, economic relations between Athens and Bejing keep increasing at a very fast pace, even if relations between the two countries has some friction




Crete, landscape enricod/flickr

Greece-Turkey, interwoven destinies

Gilda Lyghounis | 27 April 2011 ita

With the Lausanne Treaty (1923) that put an end to the armed conflict, Greece and Turkey started a epoch-making population exchange, destined to transform the two countries. Today, in a different political climate, the descendents of many 'Turks from Greece' search for their families' places of origin




A wall - oshkar/flickr

Behind the wall

Francesco Martino | 6 April 2011 ita

In the Balkans the era of bloody conflicts is over. But instead of proceeding along the difficult path of dialogue, many are scrambling to raise walls to keep the "other" at a safe distance. And even the European Union doesn't seem immune from such temptations. A comment




aenimation/flickr

Greece: end inhumane detention conditions for migrants

Human Rights Watch | 6 December 2010

The number of migrants arriving in northern Greece from Turkey has risen dramatically in 2010. According to Human Rights Watch  (HRW), Greek officials should immediately transfer migrants from overcrowded and inhumane detention sites and protect the unaccompanied migrant children




On the walls of Igoumenitsa - P.Martino

Mussa Khan. Destination Europe

Igoumenitsa | Paolo Martino | 25 February 2011 ita

In Igoumenitsa the muhajirins dream of Europe. It does not matter if they are there already: for them, the one that counts is on the other side of the Adriatic. Here Mussa Khan too, as many before him, tries his hand with fate.




Omonia, metro station

Mussa Khan. The other side of the acropolis

Athens | Paolo Martino | 28 January 2011 ita

Athens. The place where democracy was born hides a dark and painful side: it is the streets and squares where the muhajirins live illegally, waiting for a future that never comes. A black hole that swallows lives and destinies, where Mussa Khan seems to have gotten lost




Greek permit of stay for asylum seekers - P.Martino

Mussa Khan. Greece, poor Greece

Thessaloniki | Paolo Martino | 21 January 2011 ita

Victims of conflicts that do not concern them, like the hoary one between Greece and Turkey, which has left a mortal trail of mines along the border of the Evros. Even when they get to the long desired Hellenic land, however, the muhajirins find a country in the midst of an economic crisis, less and less willing to offer them protection and grant them asylum 




Eastern Thrace, near the Evros river - P.Martino

Mussa Khan. A tale of rivers and borders

Edirne | Paolo Martino | 14 January 2011 ita

Turkey, Bulgaria, Greece. Three separate nations united by the Evros-Meriç-Maritsa, today the last door for the muhajirins attempting to land in Europe. Maybe Mussa Khan has already passed here, but more and more of his traveling companions are losing their lives in the dark meanders of the river




Border between Turkey and Greece

Migrations: Evros, last door to Europe

Francesco Martino | 9 September 2010 ita

The Evros River, on the border between Greece and Turkey, is the last open door towards the European Union for migrants and political asylum seekers. A road full of risks, filled with accidents and victims. Meanwhile, Greece and the EU are stuck in a logic of permanent crisis and cannot come out of it. Our report




workers

The Greek crisis seen from Slovenia: the “Southern Brothers” syndrome

Koper | Stefano Lusa | 19 May 2010 ita

For decades, Slovenians looked with growing bother at the aids destined to the “less developed areas” of Yugoslavia, often considering them an unjust squander intended for the privileged and the lazy. Today, with the Greek crisis, in Ljubljana the syndrome of the “Southern brothers” seems to have reappeared, but this time in an EU context




turkish quarter skopje

The Greek Crisis Seen from Skopje: So near, so far

Skopje | Risto Karajkov | 13 May 2010 ita

Quite surprisingly, Macedonians have little interest in the Greek crisis on the other side of their southern border. Financial authorities forecast limited risks for the country, while some secretly rejoice at the difficulties of Macedonia’s opponent in the name dispute of the past decades




Danubio

Back to the Danube

Gilda Lyghounis | 25 March 2010 ita

For over a century, Greek shipowners were the absolute lords of the Danube river. Their ships once carried goods from the Black Sea to Europe, but practically disappeared by War War II. Today, in spite of the serious economic crisis, Greece is trying to regain its role




name dispute, macedonia, greece, PASOK

Macedonia: frozen conflict on the name front

Skopje | Risto Karajkov | 18 February 2010 ita

After PASOK won the last elections in Greece, Athens and Skopje are seemingly communicating again. Yet, the name dispute does not seem close to an end, and today's hopes rely on a more direct involvement of the EU




Profession: documentarist

Profession: documentarist

Irene Dioli | 20 January 2010 ita

Documentary cinema in Greece: theoretical debates, material conditions, and relationships with institutions according to director Anneta Papathanassiou. Our interview




Greece: the crisis will do us good

Greece: the crisis will do us good

Gilda Lyghounis | 4 January 2010 ita

In an exclusive interview with Osservatorio, Serafeim Fyntanidi, director of Eleftherotypia, one of Athens's most influential dailies, talks in-depth about the economic and social crisis besieging Greece. He says he is convinced that the country will emerge from the crisis stronger.




Macedonia name issue: The Bucharest Summit Syndrome Redux

Macedonia name issue: The Bucharest Summit Syndrome Redux

Skopje | Risto Karajkov | 3 December 2009 ita

According to the European Commission, Macedonia is ready for the accession negotiations, but needs to solve the dispute with Greece first. Despite some positive signals between Skopje and Athens, like the meeting between Gruevski and Papandreou, the country expects a further disappointment




Illegality is in the eye of the beholder

Illegality is in the eye of the beholder

Lesvos | Irene Dioli | 8 September 2009 ita

Woodstock meets No Global in a week of activism and debates at the No Border camp on the island of Lesvos, first step of many migrants' journey to Europe. A reportage




Destination: Greece

Destination: Greece

Gilda Lyghounis | 20 August 2009 ita

Two thousand years ago, pirates held Julius Caesar captive on Farmakonisi, a big rock in the middle of the Aegean Sea. Today migrants land on the small, uninhabited island before transfer to the crowded Greek detention centres




Erin Brockovich in Greece

Erin Brockovich in Greece

Gilda Lyghounis | 15 May 2009 ita

Erin Brockovich arrived in Greece to save the Asopus river, contaminated with high levels of hexavalent chrome, the same heavy metal that the American legal assistant had fought against in California




Konstantina's tenacity

Konstantina's tenacity

Gilda Lyghounis | 6 March 2009 ita

She came to Greece seven years ago as a migrant. Ever since, she has been fighting for the rights of the "modern slaves", the cleaners. Until a dramatic attempt to silence her forever. This is the story of Konstantina Kuneva, the symbol of 8 March in Greece




Obama for Cyprus

Obama for Cyprus

Gilda Lyghounis | 14 November 2008 ita

The US President-elect Barack Obama has stated several times his opinion on the long-lasting Cyprus issue. Even before his election, he noted that the divided island needed a politically negotiated solution. This statement is long overdue





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