Thu Jul 2,
2015 3:23am EDT Related: GREECE
ATHENS | BY LEFTERIS KARAGIANNOPOULOS
Reuters
Long lines
of pensioners jostling to get into a limited number of banks opened specially
to pay out retirement benefits have become a powerful symbol of the misery
facing Greece
and the problems mounting for Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras.
With banks
closed down and capital controls imposed to shield the financial system from
collapse, the depth of the problems facing the country has become clearer each
day.
Tsipras'
leftwing government came to power in January vowing to protect pensioners and
much of the breakdown in relations with international creditors centered on its
refusal to accept the cuts in pensions that the lenders demanded.
Mindful of
the fact that many older Greeks do not use credit or debit cards and so do not
have access to cash machines, it has ordered 1,000 banks to open across the
country to pay out a maximum of 120 euros and issue cards.
But in the
process it has created a compelling reminder of the costs its confrontation
with the lenders is inflicting on a society already deeply scarred by more than
five years of harsh austerity imposed under successive bailout accords.
"In
line for a handful of euros," the conservative Eleftheros Typos newspaper
headlined on Thursday. "The dignity promised by Tsipras turns into
humiliation for thousands of pensioners".
In a
country where one in four of the workforce is without a job, the plight of the
pensioners, whose monthly benefits can often be the only source of income for
families, is an acutely sensitive issue.
Konstantinos
Nikolopoulos, a 70-year-old former employee of U.S. entertainment group Warner
Bros, emerged from his bank empty-handed after being told that benefits from
his pension fund were not being paid out.
"They
told me they don't know when they will have the money and asked me to come
again tomorrow just in case," he said. "This situation is out of
control."
With scenes
of long bank queues being played continuously on Greek television, the issue
creates a big risk for Tsipras ahead of Sunday's referendum on Greece 's
bailout terms, now widely seen as a decisive test on the country's future in
the euro.
The only
major opinion poll published on the referendum showed support for the
"No" vote recommended by Tsipras slipping since the introduction of
bank controls this week, although the depth of resentment against
bailout-imposed austerity makes the outcome very hard to predict.
"On
Sunday, I am slightly confused," said Nikolopoulos. "I believe the
message should be that the Greek people has to take a decision to settle its
debt with a fair compromise, I am leaning more to voting 'No'."
The
government side is however keenly aware of the damage the headlines and
continuous television broadcasts are creating for its image.
The
left-leaning Efimerida ton Syntakton newspaper, which is sympathetic to the
ruling Syriza party, reflected the concern on Thursday, blaming the TV stations
for deliberately seeking to stoke the climate of fear in the country.
It showed
the TV broadcasts alongside German Chancellor Angela Merkel and her Finance
Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble, IMF head Christine Lagarde and others seen as
villains by the left in a graphic headlined: "The mechanism of
terror".
(Writing by
James Mackenzie; editing by Anna Willard)
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