A Gang of Greek Activists Torch the Skouries Gold Mine — 24th Feb

Last Sun­day, 50 masked peo­ple armed with Molo­tov cock­tails stormed a gold mine in north­ern Greece. After torch­ing bull­doz­ers, trucks, and por­ta­cab­ins belong­ing to Cana­di­an min­ing com­pa­ny El Dora­do and its Greek sub­sidiary Hel­lenic Gold, the group used tree trunks to block police and fire­fight­ers from reach­ing the site. If all that destruc­tion of machin­ery and reliance on the boun­ti­ful gifts of Moth­er Nature for pro­tec­tion sounds like the work of an incensed rat­tan bas­ket of eco­cam­paign­ers, that’s because it was. In fact, it was just one of many recent moments of dra­ma unfold­ing around the open­ing of a gold-min­ing site in Skouries, one of the old­est forests in Greece.

In 2003 Hel­lenic Gold, fol­lowed by El Dora­do, obtained the rights to mine the $12 bil­lions’ (£7.8 bil­lions’) worth of gold and cop­per snooz­ing beneath the moun­tain area. The deal saw the Greek state receive just €11 mil­lions’ (£9.5 mil­lions’) worth of com­pen­sa­tion for the mines, and, in addi­tion to los­ing the gov­ern­ment some mon­ey they could have prob­a­bly done with, pissed off all the local res­i­dents. Besides a part of the ancient for­est being uproot­ed, res­i­dents are also wor­ried about the mine’s effect on tourism, agri­cul­ture, and fish­ing. They’re all pil­lars of the local econ­o­my, and they’re all at risk of being dev­as­tat­ed by the pol­lu­tion a mine tends to churn out.

Last Octo­ber, in the largest protest yet against the pro­posed mine, riot police attacked demon­stra­tors, broke the win­dows of parked cars, dragged old women to the ground, attacked a left-wing politi­cian who was protest­ing out­side the police depart­ment, and threw tear gas at the crowds, the can­is­ters of which end­ed up burn­ing down part of the for­est. Unsur­pris­ing­ly, these tac­tics did lit­tle to appease the demon­stra­tors.

Since then, areas of the for­est have been cor­doned off with barbed wire, check­points are every­where, and pri­vate secu­ri­ty guards wear­ing full-face masks patrol the area harass­ing locals, demand­ing to see their iden­ti­fi­ca­tion. That last bit is ille­gal under Greek law, but minor issues like what’s legal and what’s not don’t seem to faze El Dora­do. The com­pa­ny claims that the mines will cre­ate more than 1,000 new jobs, their invest­ment bil­low­ing much need­ed oxy­gen into the gasp­ing lungs of an ail­ing local and nation­al econ­o­my.

The mine’s crit­ics, how­ev­er, claim that more jobs will be lost than gained due to the pol­lu­tion and envi­ron­men­tal destruc­tion that comes from dig­ging into a moun­tain and build­ing a mine. And they may be right. Unfor­tu­nate­ly for the Gre­co-Cana­di­an gold pan­ners, the num­bers just don’t add up. From the poten­tial $12 bil­lion to be made, Greece only gets the $11 mil­lion it secured in 2003 and a mere ten per­cent of rev­enue tax. So, once the mil­lions of tons of waste start to pile up and the local econ­o­my is dev­as­tat­ed, Greece stands to lose far more than it will make.

See­ing as the Greek sub­sidiary com­pa­ny is owned by Gior­gos Bobo­las, Greece’s mini-Murdoch—a man who owns lit­tle chunks of pret­ty much every main­stream media com­pa­ny in the country—reporting on the sto­ry has been spot­ty at best. Bobolas’s polit­i­cal con­nec­tions are what secured the involve­ment of police in such large num­bers, and oper­a­tions in the area over the last few months are on a scale that only tends to be bankrolled if the ben­e­fi­cia­ry holds the kind of polit­i­cal sway that Bobo­las does.

What did get report­ed was that Greek Min­is­ter of Cit­i­zen Pro­tec­tion Nikos Dendias’s going to Skouries and demand­ing arrests after Sunday’s attack. This result­ed in the deten­tion of 33 local activists with lit­tle jus­ti­fi­ca­tion oth­er than their pol­i­tics. Among them was Lazaros Tsokas—a mem­ber of SYRIZA, a Greek left-wing party—who was labelled an “abet­tor” and arrest­ed. Those detained accuse the police of tak­ing DNA sam­ples from them even though they were only charged with mis­de­meanours, which—again—is ille­gal under Greek law.

The police also attempt­ed to detain the two peo­ple who run antigold­greece, a blog that aims to expose Hel­lenic Gold’s cor­rupt deal­ings with local offi­cials. The author­i­ties have so far been unable to detect them, but one of the blog­gers, Maria Kadoglou, told me:

“The accu­sa­tions are unfound­ed. The atmos­phere here is already polar­ized between those who believe that the mine will be good for the area and those of us who oppose it. We’re try­ing to use legal meth­ods to stop the min­ing oper­a­tions, but the local author­i­ties take months to answer our peti­tions. When they do, the answers are irrel­e­vant and laugh­able. In the mean­time, the com­pa­ny has already set up camp and intim­i­dates the locals with the dra­con­ian secu­ri­ty meth­ods it uses.”

Many for­eign com­pa­nies are leav­ing Greece, look­ing abroad for access to cap­i­tal and more sta­ble tax codes. But if you have the right insid­er con­nec­tions, then tax exemp­tions and access to Euro­pean fund­ing schemes present an oppor­tu­ni­ty to get into Greece, exploit its shit­ty finan­cial sit­u­a­tion, and get out again sig­nif­i­cant­ly rich­er. While the news media feeds Greek fam­i­lies a jol­ly TV din­ner of xeno­pho­bia, immi­nent finan­cial melt­down, and dog-eat-dog par­ty pol­i­tics, the real crimes—the ones rip­ping every­one off—take place in the back­ground, in places like Skouries.