View Full Version : Austerity suicide: Greek pensioner shoots himself in Athens
Norweger
4th April 2012, 04:34 PM
A cash-strapped Greek pensioner who said he feared having to “scrounge for food” shot himself dead in Athens’ main square in the latest in a series of suicides and attempted suicides triggered by European austerity measures.
http://i.telegraph.co.uk/multimedia/archive/02185/ConstitutionSquare_2185728b.jpg
The pensioner, who was not named, shot himself with a handgun a few hundred yards from the Greek parliament
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/greece/9186568/Austerity-suicide-Greek-pensioner-shoots-himself-in-Athens.html
This is what a debt-based economy eventually does to people.
Serpo
4th April 2012, 04:36 PM
Sad thing to do this at 77
Norweger
4th April 2012, 04:39 PM
Well, it certainly puts things into perspective doesn't it? It's not an easy decision to make.
Silver Rocket Bitches!
4th April 2012, 04:39 PM
Reality is tough. Tougher than a lot of people can handle. This story will be played out many times in this country I guarantee it.
Sad nonetheless. He coulda made a statement and went out in a blaze of self immolation.
Gaillo
4th April 2012, 04:40 PM
Permanent solution to a temporary problem...
osoab
4th April 2012, 05:01 PM
So will we see a "Tunisian Uprising"?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mohamed_Bouazizi
ZeroHedge story from early this morning.
http://www.zerohedge.com/sites/default/files/pictures/picture-5.jpg (http://www.zerohedge.com/users/tyler-durden)
Man Commits Suicide In Broad Daylight On Athens' Syntagma Square To Protest "Occupation Government" (http://www.zerohedge.com/news/man-commits-suicide-broad-daylight-athens-syntagma-square-protest-occupation-government)
Why does this guy get the press when so few others have that have offed themselves in Greece?
from July 2011
Debt crisis leads to suicide rise (http://www.athensnews.gr/portal/1/44602)
In April, a carpet shop owner in the Greek ski resort of Arachova was found dangling from a rope from a bridge on the road to the nearby ancient site of Delphi.
"Don't look for other reasons. The economic crisis led me to this. I have debts to the social security fund, my stockists and my landlady," the 64-year-old father said in a note.
Such public acts may be rare in Greece but officials say fiscal woes are sinking the traditionally sunny Mediterranean nation into gloom, pushing the suicide rate up sharply.
"Our times are dominated by depression and even mourning for the loss of everything people had managed to achieve in their lives," said Aris Violatzis, a clinical psychologist at the private Klimaka suicide hotline.
"Suicide is always due to a combination of several reasons but the economic crisis is becoming a major factor," he added.
In the last two years, the Greek government has imposed harsh austerity measures to deal with a huge debt mountain as Greece plummeted into its deepest recession in 40 years.
Businesses are shutting down, the public sector is shrinking and unemployment is expected to rise by 17 percent this year. In the Athens area alone, more than 20 percent of shops have closed since 2010, according to the Greek Retailers' Association.
In one case that shocked Athenians, a businessman jumped to his death from the fourth floor of a luxury hotel on Syntagma Square in May. His suicide note said the financial crisis had left him with nothing.
Car crashes, cover-ups
According to the World Health Organization, Greece was traditionally at the bottom of the global list but the numbers are rising fast.
The health minister told parliament there was a 40 percent increase in the last two years in the nation of 11 million.
Precise up-to-date statistics are hard to come by, but support groups say unofficial figures showed a rise to 391 suicides in 2009 from 328 in 2007.
And experts say the reality is much worse. To avoid stigmatising their families, some people crash their cars in what police usually report as accidents.
Families often cover up a suicide so their loved ones can be buried, as the Greek Orthodox church refuses to officiate at burials of people who take their own lives.
"The real suicide rate is many times the official one," Violatzis told Reuters. "Right now we have the biggest increase in Europe.
In what Violatzis called "the first description of a psychotic episode" by Homer, Trojan hero Ajax killed himself after a manic rage over losing the armour of his slain cousin Achilles to fellow warrior Odysseus.
"Since the times of Ajax, people despair when they lose their sense of worth, when they feel they've become a burden," he said. "It is now affecting those who took on the role of provider and can't play it any more."
The increase in suicides has even prompted MPs to ask questions in parliament and the government to pledge more action on mental health, including boosting help to support groups.
The head of the state social support hotline, Christos Hombas, said most Greek suicides involve mature men who have difficulty asking for help.
"It's usually people of a certain age and economic status who lost their jobs, have big debts," he told Reuters. "People have invested too much in this aspect of their lives -- economic and social status -- and when they lose it they feel they've lost everything."
Traditional Greek mental health safeguards -- the closely knit family, a communicative and expressive nature -- are slowing eroding as society becomes more westernised, he said.
"The special characteristics of Greek society are changing," Hombas said. "If the financial crisis continues, we will soon be like Finland and Hungary."
Friends of the Arachova businessman who took his own life said he owed only about 30,000 euros but had despaired because he saw no end to the crisis and his financial troubles.
"He couldn't go on. When he saw the landlord bolt down his shop, it was the last straw," said a friend who requested anonymity.
palani
4th April 2012, 05:39 PM
Same thing was happening 5 years ago to India farmers. They were being introduced to GM crops which required herbicides they could not afford.
Commerce is not for the timid. If you can't stand the heat best seek a kindler, gentler system.
Book
5th April 2012, 11:05 AM
Permanent solution to a temporary problem...
Could have sold that gun and bought food.
??? it wasn't caused by Austerity
Twisted Titan
5th April 2012, 12:43 PM
And meanwhile the hook nose vermin waxes fat on the misery and pox he brings to the innocent and unaware.
My blood boils for justice.
ximmy
5th April 2012, 01:12 PM
And meanwhile the hook nose vermin waxes fat on the misery and pox he brings to the innocent and unaware.
My blood boils for justice.
Perhaps a clean joo fingernail can appease you?
“Jewish blood and a goy's blood are not the same” ~Ginsburg
Hatha Sunahara
5th April 2012, 01:26 PM
Same thing was happening 5 years ago to India farmers. They were being introduced to GM crops which required herbicides they could not afford.
Commerce is not for the timid. If you can't stand the heat best seek a kindler, gentler system.
Now where would a 'kinder, gentler system' be? Isn't the whole world controlled by the 'money power'? That's the real enemy. It has to be destroyed before there is any hope for a kinder gentler system anywhere.
Hatha
ShortJohnSilver
5th April 2012, 03:33 PM
Perhaps a clean joo fingernail can appease you?
“Jewish blood and a goy's blood are not the same” ~Ginsburg
Which Ginsburg said this ?
palani
5th April 2012, 03:55 PM
Now where would a 'kinder, gentler system' be?
Hatha
A least you know that this goal excludes commerce. This ought to narrow down the search significantly.
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