Desperate
Greeks Resort To Scavenging Through Garbage To Find Food
Submitted
by Tyler Durden on
07/01/2015 18:00 -0400
Earlier
today we documented the "heartbreaking" plight
of Greece's retirees who have been reduced to lining up in front of Greek banks
hoping for a chance to collect a portion of their pensions. Some went away
empty handed (there were reports that only those whose last names began with
"A" through "K" were paid on Wednesday) and those who did
manage to leave with cash were only allowed to access a third of their usual
payouts.
This
comes as Greeks may (and we emphasize "may", because nothing is
certain and the Greek government has bent over backwards to claim that deposits
are "safe") face a Cyprus-like depositor bail-in in the
weeks ahead.
But
as bad as all of the above is, it gets still worse, because as The Telegraph reports, the
beleaguered Greek populace has been reduced to collecting scrap metal and
scavenging for food.
Here's
more:
Piled high with rubbish congealing in the summer heat,
municipal dustbin R21 on Athens' Sofokleous Street does not look or smell like
a treasure trove.
But for Greece's growing army of dustbin scavengers, its
deposits of rubbish from nearby stores and grocery shops make it a regular
point of call.
"Sometimes I'll find scrap metal that I can sell,
although if I see something that looks reasonably safe to eat, I'll take
it," said Nikos Polonos, 55, as he sifted through R21's contents on
Tuesday morning. "Other times you might find paper, cans, and bottles that
you can get money for if you take them back to the shops for recycling."
One reason for R21's popularity is because it is just down the
road from a church soup kitchen, where the drug-addicted, the poor and homeless
queue up for meals three times daily.
Mr Polonos, a quietly spoken man of 55, is typical of the new
class of respectably destitute. He lost his job as a construction worker three
years ago, when Greece's building boom dried up, and in the current climate,
cannot see himself finding paid work in the foreseeable future.
Yet he dresses as smartly as he can in second-hand trousers
and shirt, and does not see himself as any kind of vagrant.
"I don't want to ever look like him," he said,
gesturing to a tousle-haired drug addict slumped in a doorway near the soup
kitchen. "I never believed I would end up like this, but as long as Greece
is in this terrible situation, my construction skills are not in demand. A
lot of my friends are doing what I do now, and some people I know are even
worse off. They have turned to drugs and have no hope at all."
Perhaps
the most tragic thing about the above is that, as noted in the video, this is
hardly a recent development in Greece.
High
unemployment has plagued the country for years and has indeed become
endemic, relegating many Greeks to a life of perpetual and severe economic
hardship. One can only hope that whatever the outcome of this weekend's
referendum turns out to be, both Athens and Brussels will recognize the need to
arrest what has become an outright humanitarian crisis.
No comments:
Post a Comment