Greece Man Set On Fire

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Greece Man Set On Fire

Unbelievable Events In Greece! A man is set on fire! Graphic photos below show the events as they happened...

This is a quick Squidoo about the incident in Thessaloniki, Greece where a man, who had just been turned down at the bank, was literally lit off in protest.

A man throws petrol over himself before setting himself on fire outside a branch of Piraeus bank in the northern port city of Thessaloniki, Greece, Friday Sept. 16, 2011. It was a third attempted self-immolation by the former small business owner, who says he was ruined after taking a series of bank loans. The 56-year-old was hospitalized with non life-threatening chest burns

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Greece: Man Sets Himself On Fire

from businessweek.com

THESSALONIKI, Greece

Greek authorities say a 55-year-old man has been hospitalized with chest burns after dousing himself with gasoline and then setting his clothes on fire. The man shouted that he was in debt as he carried out the act.

Police said the incident occurred Friday in Thessaloniki, in northern Greece, in front of a bank. Police used fire extinguishers to put out the blaze.

The injured man was not identified, but police say he had also set himself on fire and suffered burns 15 months ago, after complaining he could not pay back the debts from his failed business.

Debt-plagued Greece is in its third year of recession, and is surviving on international rescue loans. Drastic cost-cutting measures have caused a rash of business failures and record unemployment.

Greece Man Sets Self On Fire

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Greece: Man In Debt Sets Himself On Fire

From HuffingtonPost.com

THESSALONIKI, Greece -- Greek authorities say a 55-year-old man has been hospitalized with chest burns after dousing himself with gasoline and then setting his clothes on fire. The man shouted that he was in debt as he carried out the act.

Police said the incident occurred Friday in Thessaloniki, in northern Greece, in front of a bank. Police used fire extinguishers to put out the blaze.

The injured man was not identified, but police say he had also set himself on fire and suffered burns 15 months ago, after complaining he could not pay back the debts from his failed business.

Debt-plagued Greece is in its third year of recession, and is surviving on international rescue loans. Drastic cost-cutting measures have caused a rash of business failures and record unemployment.

Shocking Pictures of Greek Man Setting Himself on Fire

From ibtimes.com

A 55-year-old man doused himself with gasoline and then set himself on fire on Friday outside a Piraeus bank branch in the northern Greek city of Thessaloniki.

While carrying out the horrifying act, the unnamed man was heard to shout out that he was in debt. Police immediately used fire extinguishers to put out the blaze. He was later hospitalized with chest burns.

According to police, this is not the first time the man tried to harm himself in such a way. He had set himself on fire and suffered burns 15 months ago, after complaining he could not pay back the debts from his failed business, AP reported.

Surviving on international rescue loans, Greece is in its third year of recession. Due to extreme cost-cutting measures, the country is facing a host of business failures and record unemployment.

In May last year, Greece was given %u20AC110billion of bailout loans. But the debt-plagued country now needs another %u20AC109billion in order to get itself out of the economic crisis.

Meanwhile, UK chancellor George Osborne has appealed to European leaders to expand the powers of the eurozone bailout fund before time runs out.

Greek Men Commiting Suicide

from independent.ie

Here's an interesting article from independent.ie.

SUICIDES in Greece have almost doubled since the financial crisis, according to the Greek health ministry and a charitable organisation called Klimaka.

Recorded suicides in Greece have gone up to roughly 6 per 100,000 from half that before the crisis.

GDP in the second quarter has fallen in the country by around 7pc from the same period last year and unemployment is up to 16pc while many Greeks have had their livelihoods destroyed and find themselves unable to meet debt repayments.

Workers at a suicide helpline at Klimaka say that while they used to only get about 10 calls a day they now frequently get upwards of 100.

Those at the suicide helpline also said that the callers are now mostly financially ruined males between the ages of 35 and 60.

"These men have lost their core identities as husbands and providers, and cannot be a man any more according to our cultural standards," said Aris Violatzis, a psychologist from Klimaka speaking to Wall Street Journal.

Last Friday a man in his 50s who was burdened with debt set himself on fire outside of a bank in the northern city of Thessaloniki. He survived after being rushed to hospital.

Suicide rates have also risen across Europe but the Greek rise has been the most significant, according to the British medical journal The Lancet.

---end of article---

Having lived in Greece for the past four months I can tell you that Greek men are enormously proud men. They desire very much to be fit into their role, or their perception of their role, in society. It is understandably difficult for these people to lose their role as the bread winner. For some, they can see no other option than to turn to suicide.

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Comments for Greek Man on Fire

What do you think about the Situation in Greece?

Obviously, this is a very horrendous act. But it depicts the situation in Greece very poignantly. A lot of people are hurting. Jobs are nowhere. People cannot sustain themselves. And there is absolutely zero trust in the government (yes, I'm still talking about Greece, not America).

What do you think?

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Greece Situation

from Amazon

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Greek crisis creates thousands of middle-class homeless

By Christine Pirovolakis Oct 9, 2011, 2:06 GMT

Athens - Along a dusty road of the old gasworks quarter of central Athens, where cafes, bars and restaurants once overflowed with the city's middle class, Lambros points with embarrassment to the beat-up car he called home for several months.

After losing his wife to cancer, Lambros, who asked not to be identified by his last name, believed he had experienced the worst.

Then the economic crisis struck, and the interior designer lost his job in 2010 when the economy-driving construction sector went from boom to bust.

Evicted from his apartment, he was forced to roam the streets before finding refuge at a homeless shelter in the Greek capital.

'It's hard to imagine that I once had a life that was completely different to this - one day I had a job, could pay my rent and the next day I found myself living out of my car,' the 55-year-old man told dpa.

Lambros' story is characteristic of a tide of homelessness sweeping Greece.

Increasing unemployment from a 3-year recession and biting fiscal reforms needed to stave off default in exchange for multi-billion euro international bailout loans have wreaked havoc on the lives of many, especially the once large and prosperous middle class.

Countless neighborhoods resemble ghost towns as nearly one in four businesses have gone bankrupt, cash-strapped pensioners can be seen picking up rejects at the weekly street markets that sell fruit and vegetables while entire families are foraging through rubbish bins late at night.

Homelessness is not a new problem here. Even 20 years ago, when Greece was living an era of relative prosperity homeless people dotted the country's large cities and main ports.

But today, the homeless population is not only at historic highs, but the profile of the homeless has substantially changed as the debt crisis has forced many onto the streets through bankruptcy and job loss.

Once likely to consist of a population of alcoholics, habitual drug users and the mentally ill, the homeless now are more likely to be middle-class, the young and moderately poor individuals and families.

Officials at Klimaka, a nongovernmental organisation offering support to the homeless and depressed, say the number of homeless in Greece has increased by 25 per cent to 20,0000 over the past two years, an overwhelming increase in a country known for its family oriented culture.

Anta Alamanou, coordinator of the Klimaka programme to help the homeless, said every week nearly 200 people pass through the doors of the shelter where they can bathe, are offered food, first aid and clean clothes.

At a nearby food kitchen nearly 3,000 people line up a day waiting for a hot meal - up from about 75 people a day when it first opened a decade ago.

'The number of homeless people has increased due to the economic crisis in the last year, but their profile has changed as well. They are people who lived a normal life but due to the crisis that has hit almost all occupations and age groups, have found themselves in this situation,' says Alamanou.

With the unemployment rate now nearly 17 per cent, the new homeless come from all walks of life and include those once involved in seasonal occupations related to tourism, guards, sailors and technicians.

'It is usually middle-aged men in their productive years or who are about to retire at the age of 60-70 years-old, says Alamanou.

Traditionally, individuals and families in need would have been supported by extended families but the economic situation has become so tight that parents, children, siblings and cousins find it difficult to take in unemployed relatives.

Compared to other European countries there are no government supported homeless shelters in Greece and no official policy in place to help the homeless return to work and to society.

'Greece has been living beyond its means for decades, with the Greek government borrowing heavily and going on something of a spending spree,' said Panagiotis Petrakis, director of the Economics Department at the University of Athens.

He said that as money flowed out of government's coffers, tax income was hit due to widespread tax evasion.

Whatever the reason, the effect on Athens and other large cities and towns has been severe.

Leonidas, a small-set man in his early 50s found himself with no money, no family and no roof over his head two years ago after losing his job as a painter.

Sleeping on cardboard boxes with a group of other men in alleys, Leonidas survived by eating at food kitchens before finding a bed at the shelter.

'Every politician that has passed through this country has only cared about filling his own pockets - our politicians do not care about the good of this country let alone the homeless who are now living on its streets, like me,' he says.

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