Zürcher Nachrichten - Greek island villages say they are being left to die

EUR -
AED 4.315163
AFN 77.725895
ALL 96.43291
AMD 448.42053
ANG 2.103709
AOA 1077.467594
ARS 1690.01099
AUD 1.769939
AWG 2.117923
AZN 1.999871
BAM 1.955453
BBD 2.365881
BDT 143.554559
BGN 1.95541
BHD 0.442997
BIF 3469.97028
BMD 1.174992
BND 1.514425
BOB 8.146556
BRL 6.363054
BSD 1.174692
BTN 106.551719
BWP 15.514251
BYN 3.435291
BYR 23029.838609
BZD 2.362481
CAD 1.618663
CDF 2643.73129
CHF 0.935882
CLF 0.027386
CLP 1074.329983
CNY 8.280461
CNH 8.26857
COP 4486.118562
CRC 587.595865
CUC 1.174992
CUP 31.137282
CVE 110.245462
CZK 24.315047
DJF 209.182928
DKK 7.470568
DOP 74.616776
DZD 152.31646
EGP 55.708242
ERN 17.624876
ETB 182.828499
FJD 2.707475
FKP 0.878183
GBP 0.877084
GEL 3.166581
GGP 0.878183
GHS 13.508606
GIP 0.878183
GMD 86.365323
GNF 10215.146184
GTQ 8.998405
GYD 245.756447
HKD 9.139621
HNL 30.941516
HRK 7.528524
HTG 153.912068
HUF 384.761044
IDR 19600.80139
ILS 3.778544
IMP 0.878183
INR 106.933475
IQD 1538.833833
IRR 49478.903312
ISK 148.201658
JEP 0.878183
JMD 187.726731
JOD 0.833039
JPY 181.960993
KES 151.459077
KGS 102.753241
KHR 4700.14703
KMF 493.496263
KPW 1057.492883
KRW 1734.264361
KWD 0.360251
KYD 0.978931
KZT 605.875204
LAK 25454.488908
LBP 105211.210708
LKR 363.21563
LRD 207.359723
LSL 19.708907
LTL 3.469446
LVL 0.710742
LYD 6.367871
MAD 10.782289
MDL 19.828486
MGA 5236.072054
MKD 61.51478
MMK 2467.207805
MNT 4167.510126
MOP 9.416571
MRU 46.727719
MUR 53.956056
MVR 18.095668
MWK 2036.93901
MXN 21.110492
MYR 4.802778
MZN 75.081179
NAD 19.708991
NGN 1705.817812
NIO 43.232154
NOK 11.95493
NPR 170.460791
NZD 2.030521
OMR 0.451765
PAB 1.174692
PEN 3.955716
PGK 4.992094
PHP 68.957889
PKR 329.203858
PLN 4.222862
PYG 7889.60179
QAR 4.281241
RON 5.09112
RSD 117.375801
RUB 93.235182
RWF 1710.296898
SAR 4.408618
SBD 9.587985
SCR 15.872309
SDG 706.758342
SEK 10.930608
SGD 1.515828
SHP 0.881548
SLE 28.258416
SLL 24638.994138
SOS 670.181229
SRD 45.366098
STD 24319.957253
STN 24.495555
SVC 10.278222
SYP 12993.612358
SZL 19.712507
THB 37.023673
TJS 10.802565
TMT 4.112471
TND 3.435391
TOP 2.829099
TRY 50.189184
TTD 7.972587
TWD 36.962298
TZS 2902.229785
UAH 49.651901
UGX 4184.258458
USD 1.174992
UYU 46.037718
UZS 14211.541879
VES 314.239504
VND 30951.633094
VUV 142.716636
WST 3.26567
XAF 655.840771
XAG 0.018612
XAU 0.000274
XCD 3.175474
XCG 2.117034
XDR 0.815655
XOF 655.840771
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.17686
ZAR 19.744917
ZMK 10576.339012
ZMW 27.223175
ZWL 378.346869
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    0.4300

    81.6

    +0.53%

  • CMSC

    0.0000

    23.3

    0%

  • RYCEF

    0.3100

    14.95

    +2.07%

  • NGG

    1.1000

    76.03

    +1.45%

  • CMSD

    0.1150

    23.365

    +0.49%

  • RELX

    0.7000

    41.08

    +1.7%

  • VOD

    0.1100

    12.7

    +0.87%

  • BCE

    0.2161

    23.61

    +0.92%

  • BCC

    -1.1800

    75.33

    -1.57%

  • RIO

    0.1600

    75.82

    +0.21%

  • AZN

    1.7300

    91.56

    +1.89%

  • JRI

    -0.0065

    13.56

    -0.05%

  • GSK

    0.4300

    49.24

    +0.87%

  • BTI

    0.6400

    57.74

    +1.11%

  • BP

    -0.0100

    35.25

    -0.03%

Greek island villages say they are being left to die
Greek island villages say they are being left to die / Photo: Louisa GOULIAMAKI - AFP

Greek island villages say they are being left to die

They may live in a tourist paradise, but many villagers on Greek islands despair of a central government they say does little for them.

Text size:

"We are second-class citizens," said retired sailor Manolis Melaisis, sitting outside a cafe in Diafani on the island of Karpathos.

"No doctor stays here for more than a year. There is no pharmacy and soon there will be no school either," he said.

Although it is the second-largest island in the Dodecanese group after Rhodes, Karpathos has only two ferries a week to Athens.

In the hillside village of Olymbos, the leaflets for Sunday's national election lie on the counter of Sofia Chatzipapa's cafe.

"MPs, the prime minister and the president have all passed through here admiring our beautiful village," scoffed the woman in her 70s, who wears the island's traditional embroidered black dress and headscarf.

"They take pictures. Then once they're back in Athens, they forget about us and our problems," she said.

As well as no pharmacy, Diafani -- which has about 200 permanent residents but draws thousands of tourists in summer -- also lacks a bank, post office or petrol station.

The only road to the island capital of Pigadia is winding and strewn with stones.

- 'Breath of life' -

At the Diafani cafe, a photograph shows the old sailor Melaisis with the rest of his school class.

In 1961, there were about 60 pupils. Now there are just two and the school may not reopen after the summer.

A bus drops off Diafani's last remaining schoolchildren -- Vassilis, 11, and Marinos, 8, who live in Olymbos.

Their teacher, Theodora Koukourikou, carries their backpacks so they can climb the steep path to the school, which is perched on a rise facing the sea.

"These schools on isolated islands are a breath of life for small communities," said the 27-year-old teacher, who was appointed to Diafani last September.

"Once closed, there will be nothing left of Diafani or Olymbos... It will just be a destination for tourists."

At the start of the next school year, Vassilis will go to secondary school in Olymbos, joining his elder sister and seven other pupils.

Marinos may also have to go there despite being way too young.

Olymbos -- known for its windmills, pastel-coloured houses and chapels -- has so far managed to keep its local crafts, dialect and music alive.

But this heritage is now under threat, as is the future of the villages themselves.

"The abandonment of our villages is an open wound that no government has succeeded in resolving," said Yannis Hatzivassilis, a sculptor who has carried on the trade of his father.

- 'Asking for basic services' -

"In the 1960s people left to work abroad and few returned. Farmers now devote themselves to tourism and the younger generations aspire to a more comfortable life," Hatzivassilis said.

"We have a beautiful country but not the administrators that it deserves."

Both Diafani and Olymbos rely for basic supplies on the island capital, which is an hour and a half away by car on windy roads.

"The state must encourage families to come to these remote regions with grants or a reduction in taxation," said Ilias Papailias, a restaurant owner and head of the local Diafani-Olymbos council.

Yannis Prearis is the last cobbler who makes the leather boots traditionally worn by the women of Olymbos.

His son is not yet two years old but Prearis already knows that if the school closes, he will be forced to leave Olymbos.

"We are asking for a doctor, a school, safe roads, public transport -- basic services that any state should provide to all citizens," he said.

But he would like to stay in Olymbos.

"My grandfather and my father did this job and if I leave, it's a whole craft that will disappear."

O.Krasniqi--NZN