DEMOCRACY is like a bicycle: if you don’t keep pedaling, you fall.
Unfortunately, the bicycle of Greek democracy has long been broken.
After the military junta collapsed in 1974,
Greece
created only a hybrid, diluted form of democracy. You can vote, belong
to a party and protest. In essence, however, a small clique exercises
all meaningful political power.
For all that has been said about the Greek crisis, much has been left
unsaid. The crisis has become a battleground of interests and
ideologies. At stake is the role of the public sector and the welfare
state. Yes, in Greece we have a dysfunctional public sector; for the
past 40 years the ruling parties handed out government jobs to their
supporters, regardless of their qualifications.
But the real problem with the public sector is the tiny elite of
business people who live off the Greek state while passing themselves
off as “entrepreneurs.” They bribe politicians to get fat government
contracts, usually at inflated prices. They also own many of the
country’s media outlets, and thus manage to ensure that their actions
are clothed in silence. Sometimes they’ll even buy a soccer team in
order to drum up popular support and shield their crimes behind popular
protection, as the drug lord Pablo Escobar did in Colombia, and as the
paramilitary leader Arkan did in Serbia.
In 2011, Evangelos Venizelos, who was then the finance minister and is
now the leader of the socialist party, Pasok, instituted a new
property-tax law. But for properties larger than 2,000 square meters —
about 21,000 square feet — the tax was reduced by 60 percent. Mr.
Venizelos thus carved out a big exemption for the only people who could
afford to pay the tax: the rich. (Mr. Venizelos is also the man
responsible for a law granting broad immunity to government ministers.)
Such shenanigans have gone on for decades. The public is deprived of
real information, as television stations, newspapers and online news
sites are controlled by the economic and political elite.
Another scandal involves the so-called Lagarde List. In 2010,
Christine Lagarde,
then the French finance minister (and now the head of the International
Monetary Fund), gave the Greek government a list of roughly 2,000 Greek
citizens with Swiss bank accounts, to help uncover tax fraud. Greek
officials did virtually nothing with the list; two former finance
ministers, George Papaconstantinou and his successor, Mr. Venizelos,
reportedly even told Parliament they did not know where it was.
Meanwhile, several media outlets falsely accused some politicians and
business figures of being on the list in order to conceal the ugly
reality: rich people were evading taxes while their desperate fellow
citizens were searching the trash for food.
When Hot Doc, the monthly magazine I edit and publish, made the list public in October,
I was arrested
and charged with violating personal privacy, but was acquitted. The
result didn’t please those in power. So I am being brought back for a
second trial (a date has yet to be set) on similarly vague allegations.
Throughout the entire process — the publication of the list, my arrest,
my acquittal — the Greek media were absent. The case was a top story in
the international press, but not in the country where it took place.
The reason is simple. The Lagarde list implicates a corrupt group that
answers to the name of democracy even as it casually nullifies it:
officials with offshore companies, friends and relatives of government
ministers, bankers, publishers and those involved in the black market.
After my magazine released the list, the Greek government made not a single statement about the case.
When Mr. Venizelos left the Finance Ministry last March, he failed to
turn the CD with the list over to his successor. He took it with him.
Only when his successor, Yannis Stournaras, told The Financial Times in
October that he had never received the list did Mr. Venizelos turn it
over to the prime minister’s office. He was never asked about the delay,
and leaders of the three parties in the coalition government have not
referred his conduct to Parliament’s investigatory committee.
Meanwhile, a newly released version of the list made clear that someone
had removed the names of three relatives of Mr. Papaconstantinou, who
was the finance minister from 2009 to 2011, before Mr. Venizelos. Last
month, Mr. Papaconstantinou was
expelled from Pasok. He now
faces
a Parliamentary investigation, the potential lifting of his immunity
from prosecution as a former minister, and charges of tampering with the
data. It appears that he may become a new Iphigenia, a scapegoat
sacrificed so that the corrupt political system can survive.
This is all unfolding at a time when Greece is walking a tightrope above
the abyss of bankruptcy, while the coalition government is instituting
new taxes on the lower classes. Half of young Greeks are unemployed. The
economy is shrinking at an annual rate of 6.9 percent. People are
scrounging for food. And a neo-Nazi party, Golden Dawn, is on the rise,
exploiting the resentment and rage toward the ruling class.
The Greek people must remount their bicycle of democracy by demanding an
end to deception and corruption. Journalists need to resist
manipulation and rediscover their journalistic duties. And the
government should revive Greece’s ancient democratic heritage — instead
of killing the messenger.
Kostas Vaxevanis is a magazine publisher and television journalist. This essay was translated by Karen Emmerich from the Greek.
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