The Prague Post - 'Real' Greek farmers fume over EU subsidies scandal

EUR -
AED 4.353757
AFN 77.647339
ALL 96.816526
AMD 444.093194
ANG 2.122142
AOA 1087.105182
ARS 1700.605439
AUD 1.715346
AWG 2.135681
AZN 2.010406
BAM 1.960184
BBD 2.369299
BDT 143.90183
BGN 1.990896
BHD 0.443492
BIF 3483.991786
BMD 1.185501
BND 1.504665
BOB 8.129181
BRL 6.271778
BSD 1.176331
BTN 107.9835
BWP 16.317493
BYN 3.330248
BYR 23235.82585
BZD 2.365891
CAD 1.624273
CDF 2584.392637
CHF 0.92264
CLF 0.026137
CLP 1032.026557
CNY 8.267218
CNH 8.238345
COP 4239.080507
CRC 582.202068
CUC 1.185501
CUP 31.415785
CVE 110.512155
CZK 24.258736
DJF 209.488511
DKK 7.468018
DOP 74.115756
DZD 153.532368
EGP 55.726403
ERN 17.78252
ETB 183.241611
FJD 2.667736
FKP 0.868953
GBP 0.868149
GEL 3.188923
GGP 0.868953
GHS 12.822677
GIP 0.868953
GMD 86.542115
GNF 10304.044519
GTQ 9.029193
GYD 246.120437
HKD 9.241149
HNL 31.030398
HRK 7.53113
HTG 154.285051
HUF 381.965561
IDR 19889.689102
ILS 3.716369
IMP 0.868953
INR 108.583603
IQD 1541.146703
IRR 49939.243244
ISK 146.137342
JEP 0.868953
JMD 185.174133
JOD 0.84055
JPY 183.775821
KES 151.629111
KGS 103.671622
KHR 4734.588689
KMF 497.910388
KPW 1067.074972
KRW 1714.602459
KWD 0.363232
KYD 0.980393
KZT 592.194415
LAK 25421.854803
LBP 105344.898994
LKR 364.445065
LRD 217.626712
LSL 18.987164
LTL 3.500477
LVL 0.717098
LYD 7.484739
MAD 10.775399
MDL 20.021778
MGA 5321.902188
MKD 61.768142
MMK 2488.71842
MNT 4225.647764
MOP 9.448531
MRU 47.032185
MUR 54.426394
MVR 18.315543
MWK 2039.862057
MXN 20.575952
MYR 4.748522
MZN 75.765955
NAD 18.987164
NGN 1684.668781
NIO 43.286809
NOK 11.552195
NPR 172.7734
NZD 1.989283
OMR 0.455368
PAB 1.176431
PEN 3.946526
PGK 5.031252
PHP 69.905472
PKR 329.151432
PLN 4.208666
PYG 7866.593272
QAR 4.288892
RON 5.114261
RSD 117.663148
RUB 88.869469
RWF 1715.737167
SAR 4.444369
SBD 9.630551
SCR 16.897791
SDG 713.076765
SEK 10.566563
SGD 1.506938
SHP 0.889433
SLE 28.92056
SLL 24859.369037
SOS 671.100886
SRD 45.192464
STD 24537.483783
STN 24.554916
SVC 10.29302
SYP 13111.140624
SZL 18.982453
THB 37.011378
TJS 10.999199
TMT 4.149255
TND 3.424659
TOP 2.854402
TRY 51.443046
TTD 7.990871
TWD 37.207908
TZS 3011.535159
UAH 50.723741
UGX 4158.299845
USD 1.185501
UYU 44.549633
UZS 14277.931934
VES 417.611114
VND 31113.482114
VUV 141.672123
WST 3.266756
XAF 657.427306
XAG 0.011273
XAU 0.000235
XCD 3.203876
XCG 2.120142
XDR 0.817629
XOF 657.427306
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.505325
ZAR 19.056157
ZMK 10670.936322
ZMW 23.078614
ZWL 381.730941
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • CMSD

    0.0900

    24.13

    +0.37%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    13.68

    +0.07%

  • BCC

    -1.1800

    84.33

    -1.4%

  • NGG

    1.3200

    81.5

    +1.62%

  • CMSC

    0.1000

    23.75

    +0.42%

  • BCE

    0.4900

    25.2

    +1.94%

  • RBGPF

    -0.8100

    83.23

    -0.97%

  • RIO

    3.1300

    90.43

    +3.46%

  • GSK

    0.5000

    49.15

    +1.02%

  • AZN

    1.2600

    92.95

    +1.36%

  • RELX

    0.0600

    39.9

    +0.15%

  • RYCEF

    0.3000

    17.12

    +1.75%

  • VOD

    0.2300

    14.17

    +1.62%

  • BTI

    0.9400

    59.16

    +1.59%

  • BP

    1.1000

    36.53

    +3.01%

'Real' Greek farmers fume over EU subsidies scandal
'Real' Greek farmers fume over EU subsidies scandal / Photo: Sakis Mitrolidis - AFP

'Real' Greek farmers fume over EU subsidies scandal

Thessaloniki farmer Anna Aivazidi's blood boils when she thinks of the huge sums siphoned off in a major EU farm subsidy scandal.

Text size:

"I earn 300 euros ($355) in subsidies a year. I struggle to produce every day. I feel extremely wronged," the 40-year-old told AFP.

"Subsidies should go to real producers," she said.

Aivazidi is among thousands of Greek farmers who say they were penalised for years while others profited, in a massive scam allegedly assisted by government officials.

The scheme began following a change in the European Union's Common Agricultural Policy, which in 2014 shifted subsidies from livestock to land.

Greece's land registry at the time was woefully incomplete, however, meaning ownership over much of the country was unclear.

To facilitate them, farmers were allowed to declare land owned elsewhere in Greece to claim a share of the subsidies. Non-farmers with political connections got in on the action, lured by the prospect of easy money.

"The fraud essentially involved the process of appropriating or declaring public pastures by individuals who were not genuinely active farmers and who didn't own animals to use them," said Moschos Korasidis, former vice-president of OPEKEPE, the government agency that handled the EU payments.

Genuine farmers lost an estimated 70 million euros a year, he said.

"The scheme was well organised... it was a criminal organisation which naturally required political cover," said Giorgos Drosos, 65, a wheat and cotton grower in Thessaly.

Greek authorities estimate at least 23 million euros in EU farm subsidies went to fraudulent claimants. But the full cost could be even greater, according to the European public prosecutor's office.

"Our subsidies were slashed by 70 percent while phantom (farmers) pocketed thousands of euros," said Pavlos Spyropoulos, a 49-year-old cotton farmer from Trikala.

- False declarations -

An EU probe has shown widespread abuse of funds handed out by OPEKEPE, which, according to the government, annually disbursed more than three billion euros in subsidies to 680,000 farmers.

"Such illegal practice may have been organised in a systematic manner with the involvement of (OPEKEPE) officials," the European public prosecutor's office said in a statement in May.

The probe is primarily focusing on the period after 2019 under the conservative administration of Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis.

Mitsotakis has said that the fraud began in 2016, and has insisted that two agriculture ministers appointed by him, who are under investigation, bear no criminal responsibility.

"We have been clear on this -- no criminal responsibilities arise", the prime minister told Antenna TV recently.

One high-profile case is the conservative party's former coordinator for EU funds, who resigned in August. She denies any wrongdoing.

In a further blow to Mitsotakis, the EU probe has found that most of the allegedly fraudulent claims came from the island of Crete, where his family has held political influence for over a century.

According to OPEKEPE, approximately 80 percent of total subsidies granted from 2017 to 2020 for pastures ended up in Crete.

While the number of livestock farmers across Greece is decreasing, in Crete, 13,000 new farmers were registered between 2019 and 2025, with the number of declared sheep and goats doubling over the same period.

Mitsotakis on Wednesday stressed that state auditors had seized 22 million euros from 1,000 spurious tax accounts.

"You can't call that a small sum. And the checks go on," he told Antenna.

He added that it was "obvious" that members of his New Democracy party would be involved in an "extensive corruption case" because "we are the biggest party".

- Mount Olympus bananas -

Eye-catching cases under investigation are pastures declared in archaeological sites, olive trees in a military airport, and banana plantations on Mount Olympus.

"They set up a shop with European Union money. The politicians knew. It was a business," said Nikos Kakavas, head of the federation of geotechnical civil servants.

"If the European Prosecutor's Office hadn't intervened, nothing would have happened. We've been shouting about this for years, but no one listened," Kakavas said.

There was no absence of red flags, argued Athanassios Saropoulos, head of the Greek geotechnical chamber's Macedonia branch.

In the Chania region, seat of the Mitsotakis family, in the first eight months of the year, nearly one million registered sheep and goats produced 12 times less milk than in the Larissa region, he said.

"This cannot be explained by any technical or scientific terms," Saropoulos said.

B.Barton--TPP