Greek seaside town highlights unemployment drama
This working
class town at Athens' western tip once hosted some of the busiest
shipyards in Greece, a maritime country with one of the world's biggest
shipping industries.
Wages
were good and jobs plentiful. Apartment blocks were built quickly along a
steep, sea-facing hill from whose heights 2,500 years ago a Persian
king watched the destruction of his invading fleet off Salamis island,
in one of history's most famous naval battles.
But over the past
four years, all that changed as the country went through an economic
freefall comparable with the Great Depression of the 1930s. This town of
30,000 people exhibits some of its worst symptoms.Some 70 percent of the local shipping industry has shut down. Unemployment is 45 percent, far above the nationwide rate of 28 percent, itself a record figure, according to the latest figures released Thursday. About 95 percent of former shipyard workers are jobless.
Now, most say, only government aid can save the town.
"The shipyards are dead, nothing's happening there," Mayor Pantelis Zoumboulis told the AP. "Unfortunately, we linked our lives with the shipyards. So when they went down, our town lost its life."
Zoumboulis was himself employed in the yards during the 1970s, when up to 5,000 people worked daily on the two-mile strip between the mountain and the sea, he said. "Now, there are 20 or 30."
Inside the dock area, a bronze statue of a worker brandishing his spanner stands next to a union banner deploring the lack of jobs. Towering cranes stand idle, fenced round to prevent injuries from falling parts, and once-busy canteens have closed.
Greece's poorly managed finances imploded in 2010 after the country admitted to misreporting debt figures and could no longer borrow from international markets. It has since survived on rescue loans, granted on condition of deep spending cuts and reforms that have caused years of recession.
Perama's troubles started about a year earlier when the global economic downturn hit Greek shipping firms. While ship owners — who enjoy generous tax breaks — recovered quite fast, they took their custom to Turkey and China, which have lower costs and strong state support. Among the few businesses still alive are those that carry out repairs on pleasure craft for international clients.
Constantinos Sapkas, 39, once made 4,000 euros ($5,500) a month as a merchant seaman. He lost his job in March 2010, and now spends his nights rummaging through Perama's rubbish for scrap metal.
That earns him up to two euros a day.
"Eventually my money ran out and I had to turn to the streets, because I don't like thieving, I don't like the idea of prison," said Sapkas, a giant of a man who eats at a church soup kitchen every day. "If I could now I would work in a bakery, or dig with my bare hands ... But the jobs are not there."
Municipal social services and charities provide soup kitchens and free services from healthcare and school tutoring to haircuts.
Medecins du Monde social worker Eleni Chronopoulou said about 3,500 people use the free clinic set up there in 2010. Most have no state healthcare.
Androniki Karamanli, a mother of two whose husband has been unemployed since 2010, has a five-month contract to work at a soup kitchen — her first job in 18 months. But the former shop assistant still hasn't received any pay.
"When we came to live here in 2006, things were so different," she said.
Nikos
Palaioudis, who owns Perama's Nafsi Shipyards, the country's
fourth-largest, said the government, businesses and unions were all to
blame for keeping the industry uncompetitive. Greek labor costs are
about 30 euros an hour, compared with 5 euros in neighboring Turkey.
"In our own way, we chased shipowners away," he said.
Palaioudis
appealed for government support "even for the first and last time," in
the form of incentives and foregoing privatization of the Perama docks.
He said the nearby Skaramangas yards, which had been feeding business to
Perama until it was shut, should be reopened with government aid.
Union official Akis Antoniou, who travelled as far as China last year to find occasional work, said "political will" is needed.
"The
workers are skilled, the tools are here," he said. "The paradox is that
we live in a country that has a huge demand for ships. We're not in
Switzerland that has no sea."
___
Rafael Kominis and Thanassis Stavrakis contributed.
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