The
2008 Greek riots started on 6 December 2008,
when Alexandros Grigoropoulos ( ), a 15-year-old student, was
fatally shot by Epaminondas Korkoneas,
a police officer.
The shooting occurred after an altercation
between a police patrol and a small group of youths in the Exarcheia
district of central Athens
.
The death of Grigoropoulos resulted in large protests and
demonstrations, which escalated to
widespread
rioting, with hundreds of rioters
damaging property and engaging
riot
police with
Molotov cocktails,
stones and other objects.
Demonstrations and rioting soon spread to
several other cities, including Thessaloniki
, the country's second-largest city.
Outside
Greece, solidarity demonstrations, riots and, in some cases,
clashes with local police also took place in a number of European
cities including Istanbul
, London
, Paris
, Brussels
, Rome
, Dublin
, Berlin
, Frankfurt
, Madrid
, Barcelona
, Amsterdam
, The
Hague
, Copenhagen
, Bordeaux
, Seville
as well as
Nicosia
, the capital
of Cyprus
, and the
western Cypriot city of Paphos
.
Newspaper
Kathimerini called
the rioting "the worst Greece has seen since the
restoration of democracy in 1974".
While the unrest was triggered by the shooting incident,
commentators described the reactions as expressing deeper causes as
well, especially a widespread feeling of frustration in the younger
generation about specific economic problems of the country (partly
as a result of the
global
economic crisis), a rising
unemployment rate among the young generation
and a perception of general inefficiency and corruption in Greek
state institutions.
The shooting incident

The shooting victim, Alexandros
Grigoropoulos.
The fatal
shooting that triggered the riots and protests took place in the
evening of 6 December 2008, shortly after 9 p.m. in the Exarcheia
district of central Athens.
According
to press reports, two Special
Guards (a special category of the Greek
police personnel, originally meant for guard duties on public
property) had been engaged in a minor verbal clash with a group of
4 teenagers in a main street of Exarcheia
, outside a shop. On driving away in their
police car, they were then confronted by another small group at a
nearby street crossing. The two guards were ordered by the
Greek police center of operations to disengage
immediately and withdraw from the confrontation site. However, the
two guards did not oblige and are therefore accused of not
following explicit orders. Instead, the two special guards chose to
station the police vehicle outside the
PASOK headquarters, left
their car and went to Tzavella Street on foot in order to ambuse
the youngsters.
Following some exchange of verbal abuse that, according to several
witnesses, was initiated by the guards, one of them, Epaminondas
Korkoneas, open fire with his gun the special guards shot in
surprise to a renewed against the youths that run in
panic.Eyewitnesses speaking to the Greek
mass
media, reported that the special guards were not attacked by
the youths nor was their physical safety put in danger at any time.
Instead, the special guards approached the group and verbally
assaulted them in order to provoke them. The special guard said he
fired three rounds, two warning shots in the air and a third aimed
on the ground. Several eyewitnesses said they believed the
policeman had targeted the youngsters directly. However The victim,
Alexandros - Andreas Grigoropoulos ( ) was found with two bullets
in his body both with entry points on his back.
He was a 15-year-old
student, who lived in the affluent northern Athens suburb of
Palaio
Psychiko
and attended a private school (the Moraitis School). Immediately
following the shooting, he was transported to the nearby
Evangelismos Hospital where he was pronounced dead.
Investigation of the shooting
A criminal investigation was initiated against the police officer
who fired the shot on a charge of
murder
("intentional homicide" according to Greek law), while his partner
was charged as an accomplice. Both were suspended from duty and
were kept in detention. The defense counsel that was initially
hired resigned shortly after accepting the case, citing personal
reasons.
On December 10, Alexis Kougias, counsel for the defendants, said
that preliminary results of the ballistic tests apparently show
that it was indeed a
ricochet and that the
two policemen will only appear before the Public Prosecutor after
the forensic, toxicological, and ballistic examinations have been
completed. However, the results of forensic tests indicate that the
bullet that killed Grigoropoulos had entered the youth’s body
directly. This casts doubt on claims by the 37-year-old policeman
charged with the boy’s murder that the bullet had been fired as a
warning and ricocheted. On the morning of 11 December,
Dimitris Tsovolas, former MP and Economic
Minister under previous government formed by
PASOK agreed to serve as the
counsel for Grigoropoulos' family.
On the same day, counsel for the two police involved in the
shooting released an explanatory statement that described the
deceased as demonstrating "deviant behaviour". According to the
memorandum, Grigoropoulos was a teenager from a wealthy family, he
frequented the Exarcheia district, and he had allegedly taken part
in riotous activities that took place following the end of a
basketball game two hours before he was shot, and that, in general
"the victim did not show the expected behaviour and personality of
a 15-year old adolescent". Grigoropoulos' family, friends,
schoolmates and high school teachers immediately condemned those
statements and declared in public that the allegations in the
defendants' memorandum are "completely inaccurate" and "insulting";
the private school Grigoropoulos attended also issued a public
statement that denies all the allegations.
Alexis Kougias's
stance, as well as his comments in the explanatory memorandum have
forced the Athens
bar association to initiate disciplinary
proceedings against him.
On December 15, Alexis Kougias, counsel for the defendants,
appealed that the two defendants be released from custody, on
grounds that neither of them ever had any previous criminal
convictions, that their names and addresses are known, that they
have considerable ties with their community, and that the charges
are based on the testimony of witnesses that defendants' object to.
Specifically, the defendants' counsel took issue with the testimony
of four eyewitnesses who had testified for the
Public Prosecutor, and appeared to refute
almost all the claims made by the defendants and their
counsel.
On 17 December,
Dimitris Tsovolas,
counsel for Grigoropoulos' family, publicly requested that
defendants and defendants' counsel stop provoking the
Greek people and the victim's family, by making
degrading comments, unsubstantiated accusations, and smearing the
memory of Alexandros. The ballistics report was also released on 17
December and stated that the bullet that killed Grigoropoulos had
in fact
ricocheted. However,
forensic reports conducted on 21 December
concluded that the bullet was not fired in the air, but towards the
group of teenagers, though there may have been no intention to kill
the boy.
The riots and political crisis
First 2 days
Within the hour following the shooting of Grigoropoulοs, angry
demonstrators took to the streets in and around Exarcheia, and
violent confrontations with the police erupted.
Meanwhile, similar
demonstrations were reported in other Greek cities as well,
including Thessaloniki
, Ioannina
, Komotini
, Kastoria
, Patras
, Tripoli
, Volos
, Trikala
, Mytilene
, Agrinio
, Kavala
, Corfu
, Piraeus
, Chania
, Heraklion
, Rhodes
, Karditsa
, Lamia
, Stylida
, Drama
, Xanthi
, Lagkadas
, Kozani
, Alexandroupoli
, Larisa
and
Corinth
.
After midnight, the demonstrations in Athens turned into violent
rioting in some central streets of the city. By dawn on Sunday, 24
police officers had been injured, one seriously (with facial burns
and his little finger mutilated) and 31 shops (particularly across
Ermou Street), 9 banks, and 25 cars had been either seriously
damaged, burned, or destroyed within the downtown area.

Location of the incidents in
Athens.

Two rioters in the streets of
Athens

Rioters in Komotini.

Smoke billows through a street

Destroyed building of the European Law
Library, Sina and Akadimias Streets.
First week
By Sunday 7 December, 2008 38 vehicles were damaged, 13 police
officers were injured, and 22 rioters were arrested.
Monday 8 December, 2008 saw police assess damage as daily schedules
resumed and rioting subsided. However, all was not quiet, as all
over Greece, several thousands of high school students
walked out of their schools and marched on local
police stations, throwing eggs, paint bombs, and water bottles.
Protesters continued to occupy university campuses around the
nation, while organizations such as the
Communist Party of Greece
announced plans for protests later that day.
The massive
demonstrations of that evening were confronted by police using tear
gas; during the demonstrations, some 11 public buildings around the
central plaza of Athens, Syntagma Square
, were set on fire.
Students
around Greece proceeded to occupy their school buildings, in
protest, including in Serres
, Imathia
, Chalkidiki
, Pieria
, and
Thessaloniki
. The Aristotle
University of Thessaloniki
, the National
Technical University of Athens
, as well as the Athens University of Economics and
Business
remained under student occupation. Rioters
also set fire to the Kostis Palamas building that led to the total
destruction of the European Law Library situated at the corner of
Akadimias and Sina street. After
the fire, the rector of the
National and
Kapodistrian University of Athens, Christos Kittas, resigned,
but some days later withdrew his resignation.
A police report released Tuesday, 9 December, 2008 in the morning
put the numbers of injured police officers at 12, arrested rioters
at 87, and persons who had been brought before a public prosecutor
at 176. In Thessaloniki, 16 rioters were arrested for theft, 3 of
whom were under 18 years old. After four days of rioting, some
citizens began to act against the rioters, and some rioters fired
on police officers. Citizens attacked people that were found
looting and were seen throwing stones to protect their belongings.
In the city of Patras, according to the city's mayor, members of
far-right organisations took part in the violence. In Athens, seven
police officers were injured, four rioters were arrested for
violence against the police, 12 were arrested for theft and 55 were
arrested for rioting with another 25 people of non-Greek
nationality arrested for the same reason.In a report on Tuesday,
Amnesty International accused
the Greek Police of brutality in handling the riots. The Greek
department of Amnesty International canceled the scheduled
celebrations on 10 December for the 60th anniversary of the
adoption of the
Universal Declaration of
Human Rights in response to the police violence in
Greece.
The crisis deepened on Wednesday 10 December, 2008 when a one-day
general strike that occurred in
protest against the government's economic policies paralysed the
country.
Rioting continued in Athens as thousands of
workers gathered for anti-government protests at Syntagma
Square
.
On Thursday, 11 December, 2008 4,000 students marched against the
police throwing firebombs.
On Friday, 12 December, 2008 students attacked police outside the
parliament building. Riot police fired tear gas in response. Heavy
rain helped curtail demonstrations compared to previous days. The
protests inspired small protests in some European cities, sowing
fears of copycat riots elsewhere. On the same day, Greek police
issued an appeal for more
tear gas after
supplies ran low, since more than 4,600 capsules of it were
released against the protestors by that time.
On Saturday, 13 December, 2008 large groups of demonstrators
gathered in front of the
Greek
Parliament in central Athens. Despite the fact that the protest
in front of the
Greek parliament
was relatively peaceful, the riot police attempted to dissolve it
at 1:30 (local time) by using
tear gas and
violence. On the same day, about 100 protesters firebombed a police
station near the Exarcheia district where Alexandros Grigoropoulos
was killed.
On
Sunday, 14 December, 2008 students joined residents of the Exarcheia
district to demand the renaming of that street in
honour of the dead teenager. Also, at least four radio stations based in Athens
were
occupied by protesters. In Thessaloniki, students
demonstrated in solidarity with all the people who were arrested as
a result of rioting over the past week.
Second week
On
Monday, 15 December, 2008 students gathered outside the General
Attica Police Directorate in central Athens
. The
riot police chose to dissolve the
protest through after some of the demonstrators threw eggs against
one
riot police squad. Many of the
demonstrators were of school-age. Several newspapers report that
the protesters were provoked by policemen.
In Piraeus
, approximately 300 students rallied outside the
local Korydallos
Prison
and taunted the police who fired tear gas to
disperse them. According to teachers' unions, some 600
schools were under occupation, while 150 university facilities
across the country had been taken over according to the
Greek
Ministry of Education.
In Ioannina
, the local public radio
station is occupied by students and far-leftist groups.
Rallies
and demonstrations have also taken place in Chania
, Heraklion
, Larissa
and Thessaloniki
.
On
Tuesday, 16 December, 2008 rallies and protests took place outside
many police stations in Athens
and Piraeus
. Early in the afternoon, masked youths
emerged from the university complex in Zografou
and firebombed nearby
Athens
' riot police
headquarters. Six police officers were injured and ten
vehicles were burnt. Meanwhile a group of around 30 protesters
infiltrated the studios of public broadcaster
ERT and
interrupted a news broadcast featuring Prime Minister
Kostas Karamanlis. For about a minute, the
protesters stood in front of the camera holding banners reading
“Stop watching, get out into the streets.” ERT Chairman Christos
Panagopoulos tendered his resignation over the incident but it was
rejected by the government. “It is unacceptable for unidentified
individuals to deprive others of their right to information,” he
said.
On Wednesday, 17 December, 2008 a rally was held outside the
capital's main courthouses, where youths threw eggs and fruit at
the police.
There was also one demonstration organised
by the All Workers Militant
Front (PAME) in central Athens
from
Omonoia
Square
to the Greek
Parliament, drawing around 5000 people. Student protesters
evaded security guards at the Acropolis of Athens
and unfurled two giant pink banners over a wall
near the Parthenon to rally support for continued
demonstrations. "Thursday 18/12 demonstrations in all
Europe," one banner read, while the other simply bore the message,
"Resistance," in
Greek,
English,
Spanish and
German. "We chose this monument to
democracy, this global monument, to proclaim our resistance to
state violence and demand rights in education and work," "(We did
it) to send a message globally and to all Europe." said the
protestors. Government spokesman, Evangelos Antonaros, said this
protest was "inexcusable" and accused the protesters of tarnishing
Greece's image abroad.
In Kaisariani
, near the riot police
headquarters that were targeted by youths on Tuesday, a group of
anarchists torched a police bus.
The only person in the bus, the driver, managed to escape unhurt.
In another protest, about 40 people – including workers,
immigrants and unemployed citizens – occupied the
offices of the country's main
labor
union, the
General Confederation of
Greek Workers (GSEE). The union's president, Giannis
Panagopoulos, said the protest was mistargeted: “The GSEE does not
govern this country”.
A protest was also held outside the Prefecture
of Thessaloniki
offices and the Ministry for
Macedonia–Thrace which is also based in Thessaloniki
. Late that night, a homemade explosive device
planted outside a branch of Eurobank in
the Thessaloniki
district of Kalamaria
damaged the building’s facade when it
detonated. A similar device smashed the windows of a local
Citizens’ Information and Service Center (KEP).
In Ioannina
, the town hall was
occupied, while in Chania
, a local
television station remained under
occupation by protesters for about 1 hour.
On Thursday, 18 December, 2008 demonstrations took place in central
Athens, more than 12,000 protesters crowded the streets near the
Greek parliament in a peaceful
demonstration in central Athens which turned violent when a group
of protesters broke away from the rally and threw rocks and
firebombs at police and buildings near Parliament, overturned a car
and set fire to trash cans, splashed the police with red paint and
tried to burn down the city’s main Christmas tree which had just
been replaced after being torched during last weeks riots. The
police responded with tear gas and flash grenades, and drove the
rioters back toward the administrative headquarters of National and
Kapodistrian University of Athens and the university’s School of
Law, Economics and Political Sciences. After another round of
pitched battles between masked rioters and the police, several
hundred protesters entered the School of Law, Economics and
Political Sciences. Christmas shoppers fled the streets and
retailers rolled down their shutters as protesters smashed store
fronts and burned at least four cars.
Demonstrations also
took place in Thessaloniki
where protesters gathered outside the Ministry for
Macedonia–Thrace. Rallies and protests also took place in
Patras
, Tripoli
, Chania
and
Trikala
. Some labour unions stopped work in
solidarity with the demonstrators. The work stoppage by the air
traffic controllers forced
Olympic
Airlines to cancel 28 flights and postpone 14. Hospitals were
also operating with very limited staff.
On Friday, 19 December, 2008 a protest took place outside the
Greek parliament, and a solidarity
concert outside the administrative building of the National and
Kapodistrian University of Athens.
More than 1500 people demonstrated
peacefully yesterday in the western suburb of Athens
, Peristeri
following another shooting of a 16-year-old on
Wednesday, 17 December, night. The teenager was struck in
the hand by a bullet fired by an unidentified assailant while
sitting in a park, outside a local high school with friends. The
police admitted that they had made a mistake in their initial
statement that the boy was hit by an air-gun pellet. Tests revealed
it was either a
.38 Special or
.357 Magnum bullet. Officers are investigating
the incident, anxious to disprove rumors that an off-duty or
undercover policeman fired the shot. A police spokesman said that
no officers were in the area at the time of the shooting and an
investigation was under way.
Masked youths attacked the French
Institute
in Athens with firebombs, "Spark in Athens.
Fire in Paris. Insurrection is coming," read one graffiti
spray-painted onto the building's walls in French. Another, written
in Greek, read "France, Greece, uprising everywhere". Later on
Friday, about 50 protesters interrupted the official premiere of
the Greek National Theater, holding up banners urging people to
join the demonstrations.
On Saturday, 20 December, 2008 about 150 youth attacked the
Christmas tree at Syntagma Square in central Athens, at around
16.00, hanging trash bags from its branches before clashing with
riot police. The square was cleared within two hours. At least
three news photographers were injured by police batons. The
Christmas tree protest had been advertised as part of a day of
events in Greece and around the world to commemorate Grigoropoulos'
shooting. On Saturday evening, masked men broke into the building
housing the offices of Tiresias SA, a company that keeps records of
delinquent debtors and cardholders, and firebombed the company's
offices. The fire was extinguished but the company's offices were
destroyed.
Rioters, using the National
Technical University of Athens
as a base, launched attacks against police,
throwing rocks and petrol bombs and erecting roadblocks. In
Thessaloniki a group of
anarchists briefly
occupied a radio station and a theater before disrupting and threw
cakes and candy at Mayor Vassilis Papageorgopoulos and one of his
deputies during an open-air charity event near the theater. Later,
a group emerged from the same theater and attacked a Nativity
scene, throwing away Christ's figure.
On
Sunday, 21 December, 2008 In the early hours of the morning
unidentified hood-wearing assailants threw petrol bombs at the
police academy in the west Athens
district of
Nea
Philadelphia
six police vehicles were torched, without causing
any casualties. The vehicles that were parked outside the
building of the police accounting department at Patriarchou
Constantinou street, also suffered damage in the attack. At around
the same time, rioting and clashes with riot police continued in
the area around the National Technical University of Athens and the
University of Thessaloniki, with protesters again lobbing petrol
bombs at police.
Third week
On Tuesday, 23 December, 2008 More than 3,000 chanting protesters
marched through Athens. During the demonstration, one police car
was damaged.
At 05:50 local time, shots were fired at a
riot police bus in Athens near the riot police headquarters in
Zografou
. None of the 19 officers on board were
injured, authorities said, but the attack raised concern that
violence against police could escalate.
The shots were fired
from the grounds of the National
Technical University of Athens
’s facilities in Zografou
, known as Polytechnioupolis
. One bullet blew out two tires on the bus,
while another struck the engine. The police found
7.62 mm caliber bullet casings at the scene
of the shooting. After ballistic examinations, it was announced
that there were at least two shooters who used
Kalashnikov type
rifles and
that the particular weapons used in the attack had not been used in
any other attack, robbery, or other criminal incident in
Greece.
On Wednesday, 24 December 2008, hundreds of
anarchists marched through Athens streets in a
peaceful protest.
On
Thursday, 25 December 2008, in central Athens and the suburb of
Palaio
Faliron
there was a string of arson attacks against banks
and car dealerships, causing widespread damage but no
injuries. There was also an attack against the offices of
the
Ministry for
Development in the city center.
Arsonists also targeted the car of Deputy
Environment and Public Works Minister, Stavros Kaloyiannis,
outside his home in the northwestern town of Ioannina
, destroying the vehicle. The assailants
doused the wheels of the parked car with flammable liquid before
setting it alight, according to the fire service.
Aftermath
By
Wednesday 31 December, 2008 The occupation of Greek universities in
Athens
and Thessaloniki
had ended and the administrative officials had
begun assessing the cost of damage done during the
occupation.
On
Thursday, 1 January, 2009 Arsonists attacked 10 banks and two car
dealerships around Athens
and Piraeus
amidst the New Year celebrations. No
injuries or arrests were reported by the police. The attacks caused
minor damage.
At least five arson attacks were also
reported by police in Thessaloniki
; earlier that day police also briefly clashed with
protesters, and fired tear gas at rock throwing
demonstrators.
In the early morning of Monday, 5 January, 2009 at least two masked
gunmen fired over 20 rounds at a riot police unit guarding the
Greek Ministry of Culture
in central Athens, hitting a 21-year-old officer in the chest and
groin. The officer had apparently spotted the gunmen and warned his
colleagues shortly before he was hit. An automatic
Kalashnikov rifle and an
MP5
submachine gun were used in the attack, also a
fragmentation grenade was used as a
diversion as the perpetrators escaped. The wounded policeman,
identified as Diamandis Matzounis, was in a critical, but stable,
condition in hospital after six hours of surgery. Authorities said
they had cordoned off the region around the site of the attack to
collect evidence for forensic examination. At least 72 people were
detained during the initial search for suspects.
Police said
ballistics tests showed the MP5 matched one used
in a 30 April 2007, attack on a police station in Athens suburb
Nea
Ionia
. That attack caused no injuries but was
claimed by the far-left
Revolutionary Struggle group. Police
also said ballistics tests showed that a second weapon used on
Monday, a Kalashnikov rifle, was used in the more recent attack on
police, on 23 December 2008. On Wednesday 14 January, 2009
Revolutionary Struggle sent a statement to the weekly satirical
newspaper, To Pontiki. The statement said the group carried out the
23 December shooting attack and the separate 5 January shooting at
the police officers. By Monday, 19 January, 2009 Diamantis
Matzounis The 21-year-old police officer seriously injured in the
terrorist attack of 5 January, 2009 was removed from intensive care
following an improvement in his condition. Doctors said Diamantis
Mantzounis had to undergo two operations to staunch a stomach
hemorrhage caused by a bullet wound, but he has managed to
recuperate.
On Friday, 9 January, 2009 a long-planned education protest march
took place in Athens.
The rally was organized to coincide with the
anniversary of the 1991 murder of high school
teacher Nikos Temponeras by the
secretary of the Patras
youth
organization of the, back then, ruling New
Democracy party, participants said they protest against police
repression, corrupt politicians, the education reform and a social
system that offers little hope, it was one of two held in the
capital but it was the only one that turned violent. The
trouble began after the rally by several thousand schoolchildren,
teachers and students had almost reached its end, near the entrance
to
University of Athens where
it had started. When hooded youths broke away from the student
march and threw stones and flares at riot police, who fired tear
gas and flash grenades. The youths then turned on police, hurling
rocks and flares. At one point a group of protesters tried to force
their way into the rector’s office and to occupy the central
offices of the
University of
Athens. The occupation of the University’s offices was
obstructed by groups of students and academics. According to rector
Christos Kittas, police officers did not ask for university
immunity to be lifted so that they could gain access to the
faculty. Clashes continued in the area which was closed to traffic
and where hundreds of demonstrators remained for an hour. There
were repeated police charges and several arrests were made. Some 60
persons were arrested with several demonstrators severely injured
in clashes with police. Between those arrested were fourteen
lawyers, who said that they had nothing to do with the protest,
also several people sustained minor injuries and one was
hospitalized. Afterwards the influential
Journalists'
Union of the Athens Daily Newspapers (ESIEA) protested to the
Ministry for
the Interior and Public Order about "the brutal attacks and
beatings" to which reporters and camera crews had been subjected by
some riot police units. "There may have been excesses to be
condemned, we are looking into the issue, but the police did their
job," Minister for the Interior and Public Order
Prokopis Pavlopoulos told Greek
television. Later that evening, hundreds of demonstrators gathered
outside the capital’s central police headquarters on Alexandras
Avenue, leading to some tense scuffles with officers. But the crowd
had dispersed by late night, according to police who did not report
any additional problems.
Protests were carried on Thursday, the 15th of January, policemen
labor unionists also took part in the demonstrations "
to
condemn the violent phenomena, from wherever they come, and to
state categorically that social problems are not solved by
repressive measures". Veteran politician
Manolis Glezos who took part in the protest,
attributed police violence to the obedience of police forces to the
executive power and not the judiciary.
On Friday, 16 January some of the lawyers arrested on Friday's
demonstration in Athens, filed suits against police officers
accusing them for breach of duty, attempted bodily harm and
unnecessarily exposing of people to tear gas.
On Wednesday, 17 January a demonstration was held in Larissa, where
more than three thousand people protested against the
anti-terrorism act and requested the withdrawal of the charges and
the release of four jailed students ,who were arrested during the
demonstrations of December 2008. Larissa was the only city where
the act was applied last month when twenty five teenagers were
arrested. At the same time protesters of a separate rally also in
Larissa destroyed bank cameras and wrote slogans on walls, churches
and supermarkets.
Background and causes
The shooting happened during a period where the Greek society faced
a variety of difficulties in the midst of a worldwide economic
slump. In a survey conducted shortly after the events for the Greek
newspaper
Kathimerini, 60% of the
respondents considered them to be part of a wider "social
uprising". Many people were concerned with
corruption scandals, most of which
involved mishandling of public money, the spread of poverty, the
increasing rate of unemployment amongst young graduates and the
slowing economy as the effects of the
global economic crisis began to
show. The local student community—which formed the main body of
protesters—had also been in significant turmoil since 2006, being
opposed to a series of proposed laws regarding the reform of the
country's education system. Many of the student demonstrations in
relation to these laws in early 2007 turned violent and resulted in
clashes with the police, though the perpetrators of the incidents
of violence and vandalism, then as in December 2008, should not be
necessarily identified with the students.
As in many other countries, young people are faced with expensive
studies and are especially affected by
unemployment. However, in terms of unemployment
Greece is comparable with France, Germany, or Portugal; has a lower
unemployment than Spain or Slovakia; and has more unemployment than
Italy, Bulgaria, or Cyprus. Similarly, young people also represent
a declining demographic group, compared to
baby boomers, resulting in a weaker impact of
the
youth vote in political life, though
this is also not particular to Greece.
IMF
Managing
Director, Dominique
Strauss-Kahn warned that there was a risk of social unrest
spreading unless the financial sector shared wealth more
evenly. Greece had recently proposed to go through with €28
bn of cash injections to its banking system while at the same time
leaving medicine suppliers unpaid.
Regarding the possibility that economic inequality has been a
factor, Greece has a
Gini Index of income
inequality of 34.3 (where a lower number represents a more
egalitarian society in terms of
distribution of wealth), comparable
with that of France and Ireland; less equitable than Germany,
Bulgaria, or Ukraine; and more equitable than Italy, the UK, or
Turkey.
Additionally Greece scores a 4.6 on
Transparency International's
Corruption Perception
Index which is used to gauge corruption in a state. This makes
Greece comparable with Italy, Poland, or Turkey; more corrupt than
France, the UK, or Cyprus; and less corrupt than Albania, Bulgaria,
or Romania.
Greece also suffers from one of the highest levels of public debt
in the EU, with foreign debt valued at 93.9% of projected 2008 GDP
and 16% of revenue in 2009 projected to go towards servicing this
debt.
Reactions
Domestic response

Many buildings were set on fire during
the riots
The
Greek government condemned
the shooting.
Prime
Minister Kostas Karamanlis
wrote a letter to the student's family, stating that "In these
difficult moments please accept my condolences for the unfair loss
of your son. Like all Greeks I am deeply saddened. I know that
nothing can relieve your pain." He continued on to write that "the
state will see to it that such a tragedy does not happen again." On
a nationally broadcast statement, he also vowed to end the
"dangerous" extremist-inspired riots that have hit the country:
"The unacceptable and dangerous events cannot and will not be
tolerated, the extremist elements who exploited the tragedy...by
showing that their only goal was to spread violence. The state will
protect its citizens and society...It is the least of the tributes
we owe Alexandros. " On 8 December he declared that he had ordered
the finance ministry to offer "quick and full compensation" to
Greek people whose buildings have been damaged in the riots.
President Karolos Papoulias sent condolences in a
telegram, while
Interior
minister Prokopis
Pavlopoulos expressed "deep sorrow". The police, who claimed
that an investigation was underway into the "isolated" incident,
also apologized.
Athens
Mayor Nikitas Kaklamanis has
expressed his condolences for the death of the 15-year-old boy,
adding that festive events for Christmas in Syntagma
Square
will be suspended until further notice.
Moreover, he assured the owners of damaged shops that they will be
aided in restoring their damages, adding that he will propose the
Municipal Committee be acquitted of municipal duties for
2009.
The
Communist Party of
Greece (KKE) attributed the killing of 15-year-old Alexandros
Grigoropoulos to the result of escalating
authoritarianism, reinforcement of the
suppression mechanisms and their action,
the network of reactionary laws and the "Euro-terror laws" created
by the governments of
ND and
PASOK. The KKE has
stated that the riots and the destruction is the work of foreign
agents acting as provocateurs. The leader of the KKE,
Aleka Papariga, called for organized struggle
against the main politics that it will be well guarded against
suspicious command centers. Meanwhile, the
Coalition of the Radical Left
(SYRIZA) spoke of a cruel murder. The
Panhellenic Socialist
Movement issued an announcement holding the police responsible
for the incident and stated that people "must answer the
government's policies en masse and peacefully," while the Hellenic
Federation of University Teachers' Associations (POSDEP) called a
three-day strike, condemning the killing of the teenager.
From Moscow, where he attended
Patriarch Alexy II's funeral,
Archbishop Ieronymos II of
Athens called on everyone to face the crisis and the problems
ahead with co-operation and not with destruction. Also in an
interview on 13 December, the
Archbishop
added that the "youths are not enraged for no reason" and stated
his belief that the effects of the
global economic crisis coupled with
the large unemployment rate are the causes of this violent
outburst.
On 10 December, Prime Minister Karamanlis announced 7 governmental
measures to aid the large number of Greek businesses that were
damaged by the rioters, also aiding businesses that are undamaged.
The Prime Minister stated that the commercial world of the country
faced the destructive mania and the raw violence of extremist
groups. "The government", he said, "will ensure the sentiment of
public safety and support all damaged businesses.
The General Federation of Professional Tradesmen and Traders of
Greece saluted the measures and agreed with the direction that the
measures were headed in.
On 12 December, Vice-
Minister
of the Interior Panagiotis
Chinofotis, as a political leader of the Greek Police, said
that he felt that he had to ask for forgiveness for the shooting
incident and the resulting death of Alexandros Grigoropoulos, since
neither the defendant nor the
defendant's
lawyer did so.
On 16 December, Prime Minister
Kostas
Karamanlis speaking to
New
Democracy’s parliamentary group, condemned the killing of the
15-year-old by the policeman, while calling for all parties to
isolate rioters. He also acknowledged that "Long-unresolved
problems, such as the lack of meritocracy, corruption in everyday
life and a sense of social injustice disappoint young people".
Karamanlis said income-tax cuts will go ahead.
But he warned against
high expectations, saying Greece
will spend
12 billion euros, about 5 percent of GDP, just
to service its debt. "Our top
priority is to support those hurt the most ... (but) this debt is a
huge burden that reduces the government's flexibility at this
critical time".
International response and demonstrations abroad
- Argentina: In Argentina 50 students show their
protests. On 13 December a small group of students
gathered outside the Greek embassy in Buenos Aires
to express their solidarity and to condemn the
shooting of Alexandros Grigoropoulos.
- Australia: Australia
warned tourists of possible violent demonstrations. On 13 December a
small group of protesters gathered outside the Greek consulate in
Melbourne
to express their solidarity and to condemn the
shooting of Alexandros Grigoropoulos. The building of the
consulate was also defaced with graffiti earlier that week.
- Austria: Approximately 1200
demonstrators protested outside the Greek embassy in Vienna
.
- Belgium: Two protests took
place, a peaceful demonstrations in front of the Permanent Greek
Representation to the European Communities in Brussels
with around 120 demonstrators, 9 were arrested
afterward and a violent demonstration which took place in Ghent
where
approximately 70 protesters attacked banks, shops, several
undercover police officers and a camera crew, 19 rioters were
arrested.
- Bulgaria: Protests took
place in front of the Greek embassy in Sofia
.
- China: China
expressed
concern about the safety of its nationals living in
Greece.
- Cyprus: Riots,
demonstrations and clashes also spread to Cyprus
.
The riots
began around midday on 8 December 2008 in the capital Nicosia
and the western city of Paphos
. In
Paphos, student protesters gathered around the city's town hall and the police headquarters where they
began verbally abusing the Cypriot police. The protesters also
starting throwing rocks at the building, injuring at least one
police officer. These violent clashes were met with the arrest of
two students. In the city of Larnaca
, hundreds of students gathered at the police
headquarters where they engaged in demonstrations and "scuffles" in
response to the events in Athens
.
On 10
December, Cyprus Airways cancelled a
number of flights to both mainland Greece and islands, including to Athens, Thessaloniki
and Heraklion
, due to the outbreak of strikes by air traffic
controllers and other airport workers.
- Denmark: 63 people were
arrested in Copenhagen
when their protests in support of the Greek rioters
allegedly turned violent.
- France: Protesters entered
the Greek consulate in Paris
, France
.
The symbolic occupation was peaceful. 3000 demonstrators
also gathered outside the Greek embassy in Paris and scuffled with
police before partly blocking the Champs-Élysées
, the most prestigious avenue in Paris.
In
Bordeaux
, a city in the south of the country, demonstrators
set cars alight outside the Greek consulate and wrote graffiti
about a coming 'insurrection'.
- Germany: On the night of 7 December 2008 and
during the following week, spontaneous demonstrations of solidarity
took place in numerous German cities, both by left-wing groups of
Greek university students studying abroad and local leftist
activists. In the first week after the incident, the
German Indymedia network had reported
demonstrations in 26 German cities, with participation ranging from
a few dozen to several hundred people, among the biggest being
Berlin
, Hamburg
, Cologne, Hanover
, Bremen
, Leipzig
, Dresden
, and Nuremberg
. On 8 December 2008, a group of demonstrators
occupied the Greek consulate in Berlin
: 240 people
pushed their way into the lobby of the consulate at Wittenbergplatz
in western Berlin at around 9:40 a.m. local
time. One of the demonstrators told the Deutsche Presse-Agentur that the
demonstration was in protest against a Greek state that was
responsible for the death of the teenager. The occupation
ultimately ended peacefully. On 12 December more than 1500
demonstrators protested the death of Alexandros Grigoropoulos in
Berlin, according to the German police. On 20 December German
riot police confronted an estimated 950
protesters in Hamburg
who were expressing their sympathy for student
protesters in Greece by marching under the banner of "Solidarity is
a weapon." The German police reported that the protest
actions were broken up after they escalated to rioting.
- Ireland: Over two dozen
people in the capital city, Dublin
, picketed
the Greek embassy in protest at the shooting and in solidarity with
the protests. A second solidarity event was held after the
call-out for international solidarity from those partaking in the
events in Greece. Activists from the Workers Solidarity Movement,
along with members of the Greek community in Ireland and individual
activists, marched to the Greek embassy from Stephens Green with
banners proclaiming 'RESIST THE POLICE: MURDERERS IN UNIFORM' 'OUR
LIVES DO NOT BELONG TO THE STATE' and 'REMEMBER THE DEAD- FIGHT
LIKE HELL FOR THE LIVING' The activists marched down a main-road
behind these banners, at the height of the Christmas shopping
period. The embassy had been attacked at some stage before the
demonstration, and its front walls were covered in red paint. Two
windows were also broken in the attack. When the rally arrived it
was addressed by a Greek anarchist living
in Ireland.
- Italy: Related graffiti were found in Turin
near the
Greek consulate. Many activists demonstrated in front of the
Greek consulate in Bologna
. Demonstrations took place also in Florence
and in front of the Hellenic Institute for
Byzantine Studies in Venice
.
In Rome, demonstrators burned a garbage bin and threw fire crackers
and rocks at police cars trying to stop them from reaching the
Greek embassy.
- Luxembourg: Around thirty protesters marched
through Luxembourg's city centre on Saturday 20 December 2008
afternoon to show solidarity with young people in Greece. The group
assembled at 15:30 in the Place Guillaume and followed a route
through the city centre to the Greek Embassy. Although the group
disrupted traffic at times, the police reported no disturbances.
the group dispersed around 6pm.
- Portugal: Some
demonstrations were held in the city of Lisbon
and
Amadora
, on the December 20, the international day of
solidarity with Greece.
- Republic of Macedonia: Around 20 activists
gathered in front of the Greek embassy in a peaceful protest in
support of the Greek demonstrators. Protests were taken in front of the Greek
Embassy in Skopje
on
December 14 and at the main square of Skopje on December
18.
- Romania: Around 20 people
protested in front of the Greek Consulate in Bucharest
. Three were detained. The protest included a
die-in.
- Russia: The Greek embassy
in Moscow
was
targeted by firebombers. As a result the Russian police increased security measures
around the embassy. On 13 December about 30 activists of "Left
Front" participated in a demonstration of solidarity. Approximately
15 people were arrested.
- Spain: In Spain
, 11
demonstrators were arrested and several policemen injured in
clashes in Madrid
and Barcelona
. Attacks on a police station and a bank by
Spanish youths in Madrid and Barcelona also fueled concern about
copy-cat protests. In Seville
, a relatively small concentration of people in
front of a police station was announced for 10 December, in the
evening, since the day before, turning into a spontaneous
demonstration of over 100 people through the streets.
Slogans were chanted denouncing the repressive role of the police
and State, labelled as "assassin", "violent", "repressor" and
"terrorist", as well as for solidarity with Alexandros
Grigoropoulos and Greek riots.
- Sweden: In Stockholm
, approximately 50 demonstrators protested the
killing of Alexandros Grigoropoulos outside the Greek
embassy.
- Switzerland: In Zurich,
approximately 120 demonstrators protested the killing of Alexandros
Grigoropoulos and police violence and expressed their support to
the demonstrators in Greece.
- Netherlands: In The Hague, Amsterdam,
Nijmegen, and Leiden solidarity demonstrations took place.
Approximately 200 demonstrators took part in each of these largely
peaceful demonstrations.
- Turkey: A dozen left-wing
demonstrators daubed red paint on the Greek consulate in Istanbul
. Also a large demonstration was organised on
11 December by the EMEP.
- United Kingdom: Britain
warned tourists of possibly violent
demonstrations. On 8 December 2008 in London
, up to a
hundred protesters clashed with police after trying to storm the
Greek embassy in London. A group of anarchist demonstrators tore down
the Greek flag from the building in
Holland
Park
and set it on fire. The police have been
called to deal with "about 30" young protesters that seem to be
mostly students. Currently, the embassy is again working normally,
and the situation is calm. Two protests were held in Edinburgh
, on 8 and 10 December, both involving protest
marches up to Castle Street.
- United States: On 10
December, the Greek consulate in New York
was defaced with black graffiti, and a rock was
thrown at one of the windows. On 11 December, 50
people in Olympia
, the capital of the state of Washington
, marched in solidarity with the Greek
revolt. Bank windows were smashed, resulting in one arrest.
On 17
December, students at The New School
in New York
City
occupied a university building, demanding the
resignation of several members of the administration and greater
power in university administration, both in solidarity with the
Greek students and in protest of the current economy. The students
stated that they were inspired by and stood in solidarity with the
civil unrest in Greece. In San Francisco, a protest ended in five
arrests after protesters attacked businesses at Westfield Mall.
In
St. Louis,
Missouri
six people were arrested at a protest that blocked
traffic.
Criticism
Criticism of the Government
On 10 December the
Communist
Party of Greece's Central Committee released a written
statement where they said that "an effort is being made by the
bourgeoisie state, the
ND
government to utilise the blind violence of the hooded people,
which we are witnessing mainly through the television channels, to
check the swelling wave of discontent and popular intervention that
is developing."
On 12 December,
PASOK
leader
George Papandreou
speaking before his party's political council members blamed the
ruling
New Democracy
government for the recent violent street protests in Athens and
other parts of the country. He held the government solely
responsible for everything taking place in the country, stated that
"the government itself is the problem" and called for early
elections so that, the Greek people will be able to provide a clear
mandate.
On the same day, MP
Adonis
Georgiades of the
Popular
Orthodox Rally accused the political leadership of the Greek
police for giving orders to the riot police not to intervene
effectively to stop the riots at their initial stage. Also
Popular Orthodox Rally proposed a
project that anyone hooded should be arrested , to stop university
asylum , and forbid the protests , in order to stop the
riots.
In a meeting with police
labor
unionists,
Alekos Alavanos the
parliamentary leader of the
Coalition of the Radical Left
criticised the government for using the riot police as their own
"army", he also, asked for an inter-party committee to examine the
responsibilities and rights of the Greek police, whereas
Alexis Tsipras, current president of the
Coalition of the Radical Left, declared that the situation is
indeed very grim and that the Greek government needs to find
solutions for the actual causes of this "new social
phenomenon".
Criticism of the Coalition of the Radical Left
Aleka Papariga, Secretary General of
the
Communist Party of
Greece, called the leadership of the Coalition of the Radical
Left (
SYRIZA) to "stop patting the hooded
rioters on the back".
Georgios
Karatzaferis, president of the Popular Orthodox Rally, also
stated that "there are some political powers that are serious, and
some that pat them on the back...".
Alexis Tsipras, SYRIZA president, replied "we
don't pat them on the back, and we don't take the role of the
state's prosecutor either". He attacked the
Communist Party, describing it as
a conservative power that is disturbed when the youth spontaneously
storm the streets. He also stated that the young people of the
country have reached a deadlock, and this deadlock and their
problems force them to the streets.
Nikos Konstantopoulos, former SYRIZA
chairman, spoke to a local radio station and criticised the present
party leadership for not condemning the riots directly.
On Thursday 11th, Georgios Karatzaferis referred to a press release
of the newspaper "Adesmeutos Typos" which, he claimed, had an MP of
the Coalition supporting "the terrorism" instead of condemning the
riots. Alekos Alavanos replied that, "Some have lost sense of what
they say and what antidemocratic consequences their sayings might
bring". On Friday 12th, in the parliament, MPs of both ruling New
Democracy and the PASOK opposition criticised SYRIZA for not
condemning the riots, and for
Alexis
Tsipras's statement that "the struggle must be moved in the
schools".
On Sunday 15th,
Alexis Tsipras
current president of SYRIZA called an unscheduled press conference
where he dismissed criticism and decried what he called
"slanderous" statements against the recent protests, he also added
that "
Synaspismos and
its affiliated Parliamentary group, SYRIZA, are in an ideological
conflict with the hooded gangs, because violence brings forth
violence and leads to an impasse".
Criticism of the media
On
9 December, a photographer working for
the newspaper
Eleftheros Typos, who
had taken on
December 7 some snap-shots
of a policeman targeting to protesters with his gun, was fired, as
the paper's editor claimed he was responsible for the leakage of
the photos in the Internet. The photographer claimed the photos
were not any more in his possession in the time of the leak, said
that the editor was unwilling to publish them and denounced his
sack as an attempt of political censorship, while left-wing
newspapers and websites noted the editor's pro-government stance
during the riots. The same newspaper received harsh criticism for
misquoting
Isocrates in its front page of
December 10.
On 13 December, the Greek National Council of Radio and Television
informed all radio and television stations throughout the country
that they should be careful in how they broadcast the news about
the riots. The Council informed the stations mainly of the
necessity of not showing scenes of extreme violence (in ways that
might be interpreted as encouraging extreme anti-social behavior),
to avoid acting as if they were judicial authorities, and to avoid
showing in public documents and other elements that might be the
subject of legal proceedings. The Council noted that "there is
danger of breaking the broadcasting laws by the way of presenting
the latest events."
Financial consequences for the Greek economy
After the first days of demonstrations and the presentation of the
2009
state budget, that predicted solid
economic growth in spite of the
2008 economic crisis, the
spread of the Greek 10 year
Government bonds had, by 12 December 2008,
widened to 230
basis points against the
corresponding German Government bonds (Bundesanleihen), a level
that represents the highest level for the past nine years and the
highest since the country entered the
eurozone. This had an immediate effect on the cost
of financing for Greece’s government; these costs rose considerably
as a higher
yield had to be paid on
any bonds it sold. In addition, and given the credit crisis
prevalent at the time, this curtailed its ability to issue
bonds at all since investors were more
risk averse than normal.
Additionally, on Wednesday, 17 December 2008, the
credit rating agency Moody’s declared it would put Greece’s
credit rating, already the lowest in
the Eurozone at A1, off positive outlook if political and economic
instability continued.
See also
References
External links