Μιας και μας απαγόρευσαν αναρτήσεις από το “Sibilla”οι αμερικανοσιωνιστές...
Περιστασιακή ανάρτηση από το απαγορευμένο στο “δημοκρατικό” facebook, το ιστολογοφόρο “Sibilla"
'The number of homeless people has risen to unprecedented levels for a European country: unofficial estimates put them at 40,000.' Photograph: Oli Scarff/Getty Images
Το ΚΚΕ και ο Πάνος Καμμένος εξαγόρασαν τη δεξιά εφημερίδα παγκόσμιας κυκλοφορίας "The Guardian"
Με μαύρο χρήμα προερχόμενο από την Κούβα και τη Λαϊκή Δημοκρατία της Κορέας, σε μια μυστική συνάντηση που είχαν η Αλέκα Παπαρήγα και ο Πάνος Καμμένος με τους ιδιοκτήτες της "The Guardian", τους εξαγόρασαν με μαύρο κομμουνιστικό χρήμα ώστε με άρθρο της να κτυπήσει τη συγκυβέρνηση Σωτηρίας της Ελλάδας ΝΔ-ΠΑΣΟΚ-ΔΗΜΑΡ!
Καταγγέλουμε τους κομμουνιστοσυμμορίτες Αλέκα και Πάνο για το αντεθνικό τους έργο, που αποκρύπτει τη θεαματική πορεία της εθνικής οικονομίας και της ευημερίας των πολιτών της Ελλάδας.
Δείτε το άρθρο που πλήρωσαν ΚΚΕ-Ανεξάρτητοι Έλληνες, ώστε να υποβαθμίσουν τους Εθνικούς Σωτήρες της Ν.Δ. και των συνιστώσων της ΠΑΣΟΚ-ΔΗΜΑΡ:
Greece is facing a humanitarian crisis
The EU's own poverty standards show that Greece is in crisis. But member states won't admit their 'bailout' was to blame
European societies typically assume that humanitarian crises
only take place in the aftermath of natural disasters, epidemics, wars
or civil conflicts.That such a crisis could happen in a European
country, especially one that is a member of the European Union, seems
out of the...
question to many of us.
question to many of us.
And yet a number of experts would maintain that Greece is currently in the centre of a humanitarian crisis. The head of Médecins du Monde,
Nikitas Kanakis, the largest and most prominent NGO in Greece, was
among the first to declare it openly. The port area of Perama, near
Athens, in particular, is in the midst of a humanitarian disaster. The
Medical Society of Athens, the largest professional body of its kind,
has even sent a formal letter to the UN asking for intervention.
If
this humanitarian crisis has so far been little talked about, there are
political reasons why. By acknowledging the severity of the situation,
the Greek government and the EU would also have admitted that the
current state of affairs has been brought about by the so-called
economic "rescue" of Greece. So the authorities have chosen to keep
quiet.
It is true that there is no general agreement on what
constitutes a humanitarian crisis. But the definition used by those with
experience in the field is practical and straightforward. A
humanitarian crisis is usually marked by rising poverty, heightened
inequality in education and social protection, and lack of access to
social welfare services. Particularly important indicators are loss of
access to primary health services, medical examinations, hospitalisation
and medication. In other words: when you see a crisis, you will not
mistake it for anything else.
Greece never imagined that it could face a humanitarian crisis. According to the UN Human Development Index, in 2008 Greece was ranked 18th in the world. No one in the country really thought that this could change so dramatically.
It
was false security offered by the institutions and mechanisms of the
EU. Member states had to pay for this imaginary security by meeting
demanding economic and political criteria. The paradox is that even the
EU, the supposed guarantor of the security and prosperity of member
states, has well-defined ways of measuring poverty, both absolute and
relative, which show that a humanitarian crisis exists in Greece.
On the basis of the criteria and the data of the EU, Greece is a country in serious poverty. In 2011, 31.4% of the population, or 3.4 million people, lived on an income below 60% of the national median disposable income.
At the same time, 27.3% of the population, or 1.3 million people, were
at risk of poverty. There is no data yet for 2012, though things have
certainly got worse.
Using further EU indicators, a large
proportion of Greek households currently live in conditions of "material
deprivation". A little more than 11% actually live in "extreme material
deprivation", which means without enough heating, electricity, and use
of either a car or a telephone. It also means having a poor diet, devoid
of meat or fish on a weekly basis, as well as total or partial
inability to meet emergency expenses or payments for rent and bills.
The
ineffectiveness of European programmes for reintegrating the unemployed
into the labour market and the lack of national social protection
programmes have pushed Greece even further down the ranks of poverty.
The adult unemployment rate stood at 26.8% in October 2012. This level, although huge in comparison to the recent past, still does not give the whole picture.
It
misses, for instance, unemployment resulting from the failure of
thousands of small businesses. To the unemployed should be added the
working poor, ie, workers with such low wages that they cannot meet
basic needs. At 13% of the workforce they represent the highest
proportion of the working poor in the eurozone.
There are three
more indicators that point to a humanitarian crisis. First, the number
of homeless people has risen to unprecedented levels for a European
country: unofficial estimates put them at 40,000. Second, the proportion
of Greek beneficiaries of NGO medical services in some urban centres
was recorded at 60% of the total in 2012. This would have been
unthinkable even three years ago, since such services were typically
provided to immigrants, not Greeks.
Third, there has been
explosive growth in soup kitchens and general food distribution. The
levels are not officially recorded, but the Church of Greece distributes
approximately 250,000 daily rations, while there are unknown numbers of
rations distributed by municipal authorities and NGOs. By recent
government order, municipal rations will be expanded further because of
rising incidence of children fainting at school due to low calorie
intake. There will also be light meals provided to young students.
The
evidence of poverty, inequality, and inability to access primary
services confirms the increasingly desperate statements by people at the
frontline. The country has become a field of humanitarian action, and
should be treated as such. It is shameful for the Greek government and
the EU to turn a blind eye to it. The international humanitarian
community should respond with urgency.
"guardian"
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