Societal
Ills Spike in Crisis-Stricken Greece
Διασυρμός της Ελλάδας, από φωτορεπορτάζ των ''Τάϊμς'' Νέας Υόρκης
Η μετατροπή της χώρας -εξαιτίας οικονομικής κρίσης, ανεργίας κ.ά.- σε Κούβα επί Μπατίστα
Διασυρμός της Ελλάδας, από φωτορεπορτάζ των ''Τάϊμς'' Νέας Υόρκης
Η μετατροπή της χώρας -εξαιτίας οικονομικής κρίσης, ανεργίας κ.ά.- σε Κούβα επί Μπατίστα
ATHENS — “Five euros only, just 5 euros,” whispered Maria, a young
prostitute with sunken cheeks and bedraggled hair, as she pitched
herself forward from the shadows of a graffiti-riddled alley in central
Athens on a recent weeknight.
As a chill wind swept paper and trash across a grimy sidewalk, Angelos Tzortzinis, a Greek photographer,
caught sight of Maria lowering her price to the equivalent of about
$6.50. Maria, who would only give a pseudonym, had hoped to get some
money for food — and for a cheap but dangerous new street drug that has
emerged during Greece’s crisis, guaranteed to obliterate her sorrows, if
only for a moment.
With the country heading into the fifth year of economic depression,
and unemployment near 60 percent for young people, greater numbers of
women and men are offering their bodies for next to nothing to get any
scrap of money. According to the National Center for Social Research, the number of people selling sex has surged 150 percent in the last two years.
Many prostitutes have been selling their services for as little as 10
to 15 euros, a price that has shrunk along with the income of clients
afflicted by the crisis. Many more prostitutes are taking greater health
risks by having unprotected sex, which sells for a premium. Still more
are subject to violence and rape.
Now a new menace has arisen: a type of crystal methamphetamine called
shisha, after the Turkish water pipe, but otherwise known as poor man’s
cocaine, brewed from barbiturates and other ingredients including
alcohol, chlorine and even battery acid.
Angelos Tzortzinis
A hit of shisha, concocted in makeshift laboratories around Athens,
costs 3 to 4 euros. Doses come in the form of a 0.01-gram ball, leaving
many users reaching for hits throughout the day. They include
prostitutes, whom Mr. Tzortzinis photographed in a seedy central
neighborhood of Athens called Omonia, next to a large police station.
Shisha is most often smoked. But it is increasingly being taken
intravenously; because of the caustic chemicals it contains, a rising
number of users are winding up in the emergency room. Health experts say
the injections are also adding to an alarming rise in H.I.V. cases
around Greece, which surged more than 50 percent last year from 2011 as
more people turn to narcotics.
With scant money left in the government’s coffers, and an austerity
program in place until Greece repays hundreds of billions of euros in
bailout money, programs for health care, treatment and social assistance
have been curbed sharply.
That leaves the problems in the hands of Greece’s police to clean up.
In daily sweeps, officers at the nearby police station arrest
prostitutes and jail them overnight. There, they are out of reach of the
drug, but also cut off from assistance of any type.
For Mr. Tzortzinis, who grew up in the area, seeing women give
themselves for as little as 5 euros underscores one of the many horrors
of Greece’s drawn-out crisis.
“These women need help,” he said. “But they cannot help themselves. Nobody is helping them.”
Angelos Tzortzinis
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