Monday 29 October 2012

Times of universal deceit


'During times of universal deceit,
telling the truth becomes a revolutionary act'.

George Orwell




The Greek journalist Kostas Vaxevanis was arrested last night after publishing the so-called Lagarde list, a list that two years ago was given by the then French finance minister Christine Lagarde to her Greek counterpart, Papakonstantinou.  The list contains the names of approximately 2,000 Greeks who have bank accounts in HSBC in Switzerland many of whom are suspected of using their accounts to hide tax evasion.

The list was never published and no investigation was ever carried out. Successive Greek governments have been accused of trying to cover it up. Giorgos Papakonstantinou, the finance minister at the time who asked Christine Lagarde to pass it on says: 'my interpretation is that they probably got scared. They looked at the names on the list and saw it was full of important people from business and publishing and decided not to go ahead without clear political instructions and cover. It is not insignificant (about 1.5bn euro in total) but the truth is that compared with other lists it's not the treasure trove everyone is looking for. There is a list from the Bank of Greece of 54,000 people who took 22bn out of the country. This is official and can be used in court. The first check found 6 billion that can't be justified and letters are going to 15,000 people on that list who will be taxed at  the 45% rate. .. What we have is a broken and corrupt system'.

'Instead of arresting the tax evaders and the ministers who had the list in their hands, they're trying to arrest the truth and freedom of the press',  Mr Vaxevanis declared. He added: 'If anyone is accountable before the law then it's those ministers who hid the list, lost it and said it didn't exist. I only did my job. I am a journalist and I did my job'.


                                                            *   *   *

Here is another, alternative list to complement the so-called Lagarde list:

It has been estimated that 15 billion euros per year are lost through tax evasion.

Last year 112 tax dodgers were arrested owing over 334 million euros. Most of them were released within days of their arrest having 'promised' that they would repay their debts. Those who have made some payments towards their tax debts only paid 20% of what was owed.

It can take up to 8 years for tax dodgers to be taken to court.

In July of this year there was a post on the the Greek Finance Ministry's website declaring that the Ministry was unable to collect court-ordered fines totalling 12.6 billion euros, or 6.3% of the country's Gross Domestic Product.

The fine of 4.8 billion euros imposed on the Acropolis stockbrokerage for its role in the structured bonds scandal three and a half years ago was never collected - the state did not get a single euro out of that debt.

Most of the laws that have been introduced to bring about the structural reforms needed and which had been previously agreed with the Troika have not been implemented.

30,000 civil servants have been suspended on partial pay.

Since 2010 pensions have been cut by 40% , supplementary pensions are to be slashed by 35%.

In the past 10 years Greece's arms budget has been 4% of its GDP, more than 900 euros per person - the EU average is 1.7%

From having one of the lowest suicide rates in Europe, Greece now has one of the highest. In June alone there were 350 attempts and 50 deaths. The cause of death is usually cited as 'dire economic problems'.

The numbers of the homeless have risen by 25% in the last few months: there are now 13,000 recorded homeless in Athens, a city of 4 million. A lot of them don't have the traditional profile of homeless people. A lot are well dressed and well educated, people who had a home, a job, a car a few months ago - now they have nothing.

The situation in hospitals is dire: there is a shortage of doctors, staff, drugs, equipment and basic first aid. Doctors and pharmacists have been going on strike because some have not been paid for two years. Pharmacies are owed millions for medicines they have dispensed and for which they have not been reimbursed by the state. (117 millions in May and 145 in June - these are the latest figures available to me).

One in four Greeks is unemployed. Youth unemployment has reached 55% compared to 20% four years ago. Every day in June an average of 1,688 people lost their job.

Legislation has gone through aiming to reduce the minimum wage by 22% to about 600 euros a month.

New legislation is being proposed which would curtail workers' rights dramatically. This would consequently increase unemployment and reduce negotiating rights which would lead to further wage cuts.


                                                                    *  *  *

So while Greek people are hit by such harsh austerity measures that the situation is reaching humanitarian crisis levels, the rich don't pay their taxes and are able to hide their ill-gotten gains abroad with impunity.  The government is doing nothing about this. Instead of getting the tax dodgers to pay what they owe, the government arrests the whistblower.

Greek law is very selective about who it will punish. Just to give one example, one of the MPs of the neo-Nazis, attacked an MP on television, an act seen by millions; he has been heavily involved in the destruction of the stalls and merchandise of non-white vendors in markets. He has not been prosecuted for either of these.  He has been accused of armed robbery, grievous bodily harm and illegal possession of arms but these allegations have not been properly investigated.

Greek police not only do not take allegations of racist violence seriously, they actively discourage victims against filing complaints and some are warned that they will be detained if they insist on an investigation. Up to date not one single perpetrator of a racist attack has been convicted.

The names on the Lagarde list are meant to include politicians as well as other prominent people and this would explain not only the secrecy surrounding the list but also the arrest. No wonder one of the main slogans in the protests in Athens is 'thieves, thieves'.




Sources:
  • Kathimerini
  • 'Greek magazine editor in court for naming alleged tax evaders', The Guardian
  • 'Greece austerity: how far still to go?' BBC
  • 'Greece's austerity does not extend to its arms budget', Paul Haydon, 21 March 2012, The Guardian
  • 99GetSmart
  • Daily Kos



For daily updates on Greece and lots more on current affairs go to: http://99getsmart.com/

Friday 26 October 2012

Bronze


Bronze, at the Royal Academy of Arts.

A hugely ambitious project, Bronze tells the 6,000-year-old story of bronze as an artistic material: national treasures from the classical period to the present day, and from disparate cultures around the world, have been brought together comprising 177 works of art from 98 lenders. The earliest pieces in the show date from around 3,700 BC and the latest from 2012.

One of the many appeals of bronze to artists is that it can take exceptionally fine detail. Casting is not an easy process, but even so, by the 5th century BC bronze was already the preferred material for free-standing sculptures across the Greek world. They were made in huge numbers and yet very few remain: unlike marble statues, bronze ones were simply melted down and reused. Ironically, the best surviving bronzes are those that were lost at sea while being imported from Greece to Rome.




Dancing Satyr, believed to be the work of Praxiteles who was active in the second half of the 4th century BC

This is the first work you encounter, with a room all of its own, and is indisputably the star of the show.




The Satyr has his head thrown back in ecstasy - his alabaster eyes appear like two pinpoints of light in the dimly lit gallery. With only one limb intact, so that the satyr appears to be suspended in mid-air, the sculpture lay on the seabed for millennia and was recovered off the coast of Sicilly in 1998.




Perseus Standing on Top of Medusa at 12ft tall, this is the largest sculpture in the exhibition.




Head with Crown, 14/15th century, Ife, Nigeria




Massimiliano Soldani-Benzi, after Bernini, Damned Soul (Anima Damnata), 1705-07





Constantin Brancusi, Danaide, 1918





Ombra de la Sera, Etruscan Votive sculpture

I saw this from a distance and thought: Giacometti. But it is an Etruscan sculpture that dates back to the 2nd century BC and was the inspiration for most of Giacometti's work.





Alberto Giacometti, La Cage, 1950




Barbara Hepworth, Curved Form (Trevalgan), 1956





Henry Moore, Helmet Head, 1960




Louise Bourgeois, Spider
 
 
 

Tony Cragg, Points of View, 2007.
 
 
 
 


Wednesday 24 October 2012

Lyveden New Bield


The garden and lodge at Lyveden were created by Sir Thomas Tresham between 1595 and 1605. He was persecuted as a Catholic and his son was implicated in the Gunpowder Plot and because of this, the house was raised to the ground.




All that remains now is the lodge.




which looks like a ruin




but this is as far as they got to building it - it was never completed because of the persecution of the family




there is no roof, no internal floors




except for a small platform which you can access by this spiral staircase




and then you can admire the views.




Due to the absence of a roof, the floor was flooded on the day we visited as it had been raining hard all night.




There are three viewing mounts in the grounds




This is the second viewing mout with the third one right at the end.




They were dredging the lake and parts of the moat when we were there so these parts of the grounds were out of bounds.




you can get some good views from the mounts




of the surrounding countryside.




So many shades of green....




the orchard



this is all around, surrounding the grounds




The view as we leave.



Monday 22 October 2012

No to austerity



National TUC demonstation in London against the cuts and austerity, October 20.




The demonstration was huge, it was estimated that 150,000 people took part.




The demonstrators started moving off at 12:00.




Lots of interesting banners, lots of imaginative dressing up. I loved the three little girls dressed as nurses, carrying their 'keep our NHS safe' banners.




Keeping the rich safe. There were also riot police stationed across the road.




We were at the head of the demonstration and we arrived at Hyde Park early on.




Lots of evidence of solidarity for Greece




some more.




We stayed in the park for an hour watching people pouring in, looking at the stalls




that's when we spotted this guy. When I spoke to him in Greek he did not understand me. I found out he is Turkish - that was the most pleasantly unexpected bit of the day





We then decided to retrace our steps and walk back along the route of the demonstration




lots of interesting placards




and people




this placard came out blurry, but still worth including




every walk of life was represented




which was really pleasing




carnival atmosphere




with lots of imagination




solidarity with Greece




another gay group




lots of music




home made placards are always the best




so many banners




many banners and placards about 'plebs'




here's another one




and another one




 
as I said, homemade ones are always the best




solidarity














Outside Starbucks.



 
It was a great day and very pleasing that so many people turned up. Shame on the media as the fact that 150,000 people took part in the demonstration in London, and loads more in Glasgow and Belfast was the most underreported event of the weekend. No mention in the Sunday Observer. Most other papers reported the event by emphasising the fact that Ed Miliband was booed when he said that there would be more austerity under Labour - it was the same with television news.  Our 'objective', 'non-biased' press will only report marches when there is a confrontation with the police so that they can discredit the demonstrators and their cause. Shame!



For daily updates on Greece and lots more on current affairs go to: http://99getsmart.com/