Episode 1 Greece with Simon Reeve


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Transcript


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I'm on a journey around Greece.

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At the eastern edge of Europe...

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a land of mystery.

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Look at that!

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SEAGULLS CRY

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With fabulous islands...

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..and rugged mountains...

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..it's one of the most beautiful and troubled countries in Europe.

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'After years of upheaval...'

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Bloody hell!

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'..people here are still having a tough time.'

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Petrol bombs being thrown. EXPLOSION

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'I'll see how Greeks are surviving

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'and enduring...'

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THEY LAUGH

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It's the only way to travel.

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'..in this stunning and dramatic land.'

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Oh, my good God!

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On this first leg of my journey

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I'll be visiting some of Greece's glorious islands

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before heading to the ancient capital, Athens.

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I'll discover how some islanders made their fortunes.

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Look at them - they look disgusting.

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I'll see a side to Crete that's normally hidden.

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GUNSHOTS

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All right, so this is a traditional greeting.

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It's OK.

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And in Athens,

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I come face to face with the fury of a betrayed generation.

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Can we...?

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Look at that.

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I'm starting my journey in the Dodecanese islands.

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It's a part of Greece

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that is visited and loved by millions of travellers every year.

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There are thousands of islands in Greece,

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scattered across the Eastern Mediterranean.

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'Sand and sea like this on the island of Kos

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'helps to lure around 25 million foreign holiday-makers to Greece

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'every year, more than twice the actual population of the country.'

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Now we all know that Greece is in a bit of a pickle at the moment,

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but this is an amazing place.

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I have to personally confess to being a big fan of Greece.

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I love the beaches, the people, the mountains, the ruins,

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the food, the way of life.

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I love Greece.

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As Greece endures an economic crisis,

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tourism is one of the few industries keeping the country afloat.

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Tourism accounts for 20% of the national economy,

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but it's 60% for islands like Kos.

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Of course, it's only in the last few decades that tourism

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'has become such a phenomenon, and many islands in the Aegean Sea

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'used to rely on a very different trade.'

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Look at these.

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Not artificial. Real sponges.

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You see these for sale around the islands in this area.

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The sponge-fishing industry

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dominated these islands for centuries.

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Sponge merchants made fortunes.

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One even dined at the court of Queen Victoria.

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Agelis? Agelis! Kalimera!

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'I met up with Agelis Trakelis.'

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He's one of the last remaining sponge fishermen.

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There's not many boats out on the sea at the moment.

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Hundreds of boats used to fish these waters for sponges.

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Then in the 1940s, artificial sponges were invented.

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'Now there's just five sponge boats left,

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'and it can be tough to make a living.'

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IN GREEK:

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Can we come in and have a look?

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So, it's tight in here.

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What happens if you have a big row, a big argument?

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THEY LAUGH

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He's pointing to the knife!

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Sponges can't be fished using rods or nets.

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Agelis has to dive for them.

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AGELIS SPEAKS IN GREEK

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We're going to go down onto a shipwreck,

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and you can see the top of it just there.

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So, he's going to use this tank of compressed air

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with a hose attached -

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a very basic, rudimentary way of diving.

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It's also extremely dangerous.

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Hundreds of Greek fishermen have died diving like this,

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from decompression sickness, or the bends.

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Two of Agelis's brothers fell victim.

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You must think of them every time you dive, surely.

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Let's go down safely and slowly.

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Come up safely and slowly, more to the point.

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HISSING

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Ready?

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HISSING

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'By using a compressor,

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'Agelis can stay underwater for much longer

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'than if he was using scuba tanks on his back.'

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Sponges are actually one of the simplest animal organisms.

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They're vital to the global marine eco-system,

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pumping and filtering seawater through their pores

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and providing a refuge for other sea-life.

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'Some live for more than 100 years.'

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In the past, there were millions

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covering the sea-bed in the Mediterranean,

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helping to keep the water healthy.

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Oh, he's gone really deep.

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Oh, much deeper than I can...free-drive.

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With a compressor, Agelis can dive to 70 or 80 metres.

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He's sucking air through a thin hose,

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and at those depths it can tear or get tangled.

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If something goes wrong and he surfaces too quickly,

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he could die from decompression sickness.

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It's dangerous, but the introduction of compressor diving

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in the 1800s enabled Greek divers to strip the sea of sponges.

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Wow.

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These are sponges in their raw state.

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Astonishing. Look at them, they look disgusting.

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How do you turn it into a sponge that people would recognise?

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You tread on it?

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God.

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Over the last couple of decades,

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a disease has devastated the remaining sponge population.

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'Scientists and fishermen like Agelis

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'believe that climate change and pollution

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'have contributed to the spread of the disease.'

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How is the sea different now to when you first started?

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It's very depressing to hear,

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and it's happened in such a short space of time as well.

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Just a generation. Just a couple of decades.

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The Mediterranean's been emptied of life.

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To gather enough sponges to survive, Agelis now sails hundreds of miles,

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staying away from home for months at a time.

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And as the industry has collapsed,

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so has the population of many of these small Greek islands.

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One of them is Pserimos, the tiny place Agelis and his children call home.

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The island's also been hit hard by Greece's financial crisis.

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Even tourism isn't saving them.

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So, who is this?

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People look at the Greek islands, particularly in the summer time

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when they think they're the perfect place to live.

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Are they a sort of paradise,

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or are they quite a tough place to live?

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Thousands of people have moved from these islands

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to the mainland in search of work.

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Some islands have lost half their population.

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What do you think will happen to Pserimos

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if sponge diving completely comes to an end?

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MUSIC PLAYS

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There was a buzz about the place when I visited,

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but that was only because it was a national festival.

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Extended families had returned from across Greece.

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Look, life goes on.

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People party.

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SINGING AND MUSIC

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But soon the visitors would leave

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and the island would become sleepy Pserimos again.

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The winter population on the island

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is now roughly 30 people, mostly retired.

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MUSIC FADES OUT

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If more tourists don't start visiting,

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some fear this current generation of islanders could be the last.

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The next morning, I said farewell to Agelis and his family.

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I'm heading on to another island.

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I'm going to take a taxi.

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'Little Pserimos relies on small boats

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'to connect it to the rest of the Aegean.

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'Pottering between Greek islands by sea

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'still feels like an exotic adventure,

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'however large the ferry.

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'I was on my way to Lesvos, one of the biggest Greek islands.'

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Like every Greek island

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it's got its own character and traditions,

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along with fantastic beaches and wonderful tavernas

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that pull in the tourists.

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But it's also Europe's eastern border,

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and its position puts it on the front line

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of a humanitarian and political crisis.

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Look at that view!

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Straight ahead, look at that!

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That...is Turkey.

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Greece has been receiving an influx of refugees and migrants,

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many of them coming from,

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or fleeing, the conflict in Syria.

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My God.

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Look at this.

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Thousands of life jackets spoke of the scale of what was happening.

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It was summer and the flow of refugees

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and migrants into Greece was just starting to soar.

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Around 2,000 had been arriving on Lesvos most nights.

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But I'd arrived at a turning point,

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as people began crossing in broad daylight in huge numbers.

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Oh, my God.

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They're coming now.

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They're crossing now!

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I've got a slightly sick feeling in my stomach

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because some of these boats do not make it.

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If they don't, there is absolutely nothing we can do standing here.

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In 2015, more than 500 people drowned

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trying to cross from Turkey to Europe.

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I would say there's 40 people on that boat.

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There's some women, there's children as well on board.

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Water! Water!

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My God, maybe...

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Look at this.

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You've come from Syria?

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Where in Syria? Aleppo, or...?

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HE SPEAKS HIS OWN LANGUAGE

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He's got a child's toy around him.

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How long has it taken you to come across?

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-How long to come...?

-One hour.

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One hour across the water.

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-How much money did it cost?

-1,000.

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-To go from there to here?

-Yes. From, from Turkey.

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What do you think Europe will give you?

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I am studying pharmacy.

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You are studying to be a pharmacist?

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I am pharmacist.

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What have you brought with you? What do you have? Your possessions?

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You have this.

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-Everything else had gone?

-Everything. Yes, yes.

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'It was overwhelming.'

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Good luck.

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This crisis was part of the world's biggest wave of mass migration

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since the Second World War.

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There's just more and more coming.

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This is the edge of Europe and there are hundreds of people coming.

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-Assalaamu alaikum.

-Assalaamu alaikum.

-Alleluia.

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Water, find more water...

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It was particularly upsetting to see so many young children,

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their lives in complete upheaval.

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He's very tired.

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I bet they are.

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I am...cameraman.

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You're a cameraman?

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-Thanks.

-Thanks.

-HE SNIFFS

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-Good luck to you.

-Thank you.

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HE SPEAKS IN HIS OWN LANGUAGE

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Thank you.

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-I have no words, just good luck, OK?

-Thank you.

-Good luck.

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-Whatever you do.

-Good luck.

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'Most of the arrivals I met were Syrians fleeing conflict,

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'but there were also many other nationalities.

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'One Afghan lad told me how he and his classmates

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'had left school in Kabul a month earlier

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'when they heard how easy it suddenly was to get into Europe.'

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When we were in Afghanistan, we were hearing that...

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the border is free, yeah?

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Everybody can go freely to the European country.

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I was stunned.

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Thousands of miles away people were being told that Europe was open.

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There is another boat just coming, just here,

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and there is nobody here helping them, stopping them...

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doing anything.

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There is no sign of the authorities, there is no European force,

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there is no Greek border patrol, there is...

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There are just holiday-makers,

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and there are hundreds of people coming in.

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Most arrivals were refugees from conflict.

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Some were economic migrants.

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Europeans often focus either on their right to sanctuary and asylum,

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or their impact on us.

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Rarely do we debate the consequences of migration

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on societies people have left,

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and the old, sick and poor who can remain behind.

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But if we absorb millions of people from struggling countries,

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we may never give those struggling countries a chance

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to stabilise and succeed,

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because so often the people who make it here...

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It's like an obstacle course, it's the brightest and the best who often

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are the ones who make it, the ones who would be most likely to...

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help build a country...

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are the ones who quite naturally...

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need, want to leave.

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Many of the new arrivals were young men travelling alone.

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Often they come from traditional conservative communities.

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They were heading into a Europe increasingly adopting values

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like gay marriage and women's rights.

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I wondered if they knew what lay ahead.

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'The next stage of their journey is the 40 miles to the port

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'where ferries go to Athens.

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'Many refugees walk in 35-degree heat.

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'I saw a woman struggling with a child.'

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I have to stop.

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How old is this one?

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He's five.

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Five years old.

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-Are you OK?

-No.

-No.

-I will die.

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-Have some water.

-Thank you.

-Just breathe slow.

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-We'll put you in the car. Breathe slow.

-Thank you.

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SHE GASPS

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We're giving a lift to a mum and her son and daughter.

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They don't want their faces...shown, quite understandably.

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-Is that from, from Syria?

-Yes.

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-Terrazul.

-Terrazul.

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'Her English-speaking sister was also in the back.

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'We caught up with some men from her family.'

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We're not sure what's going on.

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We think it's possible that one of the men is saying

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that she cannot travel with men.

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'But the woman's sister explained what happened.

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'The men forced the children and their mother out of the car

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'and back into the heat and the long walk

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'because the mother hadn't sought their permission to accept my help.'

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SIMON EXHALES DEEPLY

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In that crazy...little situation,

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you have a sense of cultures...

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colliding, I think,

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in a way that frightens some people and worries them.

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Europeans, it concerns them, and I can completely understand why.

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Just a few miles down the road was a popular tourist town.

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Well, now this gets really surreal.

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Them coming into Molyvos now.

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Castle on top of the hill,

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beautiful houses scattered around it.

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Now you get Syrian refugees meets Greek...

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..holiday village.

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COUGHING

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BELL RINGS

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I think I've lost numbers on the scale

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to express how surreal this is.

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We are...

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..an offensively short distance

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from beaches where people... are landing...

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..as refugees and migrants.

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I'm just astonished by...

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how worlds collide.

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The next morning, refugee boats kept coming.

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Lesvos depends on farming and tourism,

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and locals were worried holiday-makers would stay away.

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I went for breakfast...

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'..and found a local boat moored in the harbour.'

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-Are you still running boat trips?

-Yes, I do.

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And are you still going out regularly during the day?

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I'm trying.

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-Can I come on board?

-Please.

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'Stratis Kabanos earns his living

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'taking tourists on snorkelling trips.'

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-Have a seat.

-Thank you.

-Stay in the sun.

-Stay out of the sun, I think.

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-You paid for it!

-THEY LAUGH

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I'm not sure I have, to be honest.

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How does this season,

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this summer compare to summers over the last 20 years?

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I don't have numbers, but it's definitely down, much down.

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I don't know, maybe... 50% down or something.

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-To my feeling.

-50% down?

-To my feeling. I'm going to check.

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-Does that make it one of the worst?

-I think so, yes.

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How have people here in the community reacted

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and responded to the migrants and the refugees coming in?

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Majority of the people, they see it negatively.

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The majority of Greeks here?

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Yes. I mean...

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Yes, please, sorry.

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Say it in English. Say it...

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Say it in English.

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Say it in English.

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This is exactly what I was describing to you.

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-That's the feeling of the people, is they're worried.

-Mm.

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My feeling is, I have to deal with it, because...

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You see people suffering, guys.

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What are you doing?

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STRATIS EXHALES DEEPLY

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I just, I can't do much.

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Just yesterday, I saw a boat with 33 people,

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I had a couple of ladies from Holland, we stopped, we helped them.

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We cleaned the beach, we gave directions to the people.

0:23:230:23:26

What do you say to people who would say,

0:23:260:23:30

look, by helping them you are encouraging more to come?

0:23:300:23:35

If you are desperate, you will come.

0:23:350:23:38

You will swim, you will walk.

0:23:380:23:40

We can't stop them.

0:23:400:23:42

That's for sure. They can't be stopped.

0:23:420:23:44

Either we are helping them or not.

0:23:440:23:47

They will keep coming.

0:23:470:23:48

If I keep running behind you with a knife,

0:23:480:23:51

you will keep running too.

0:23:510:23:53

You find a wall, you will try to climb it. This is how it is.

0:23:530:23:57

For me it's that simple, you know.

0:23:570:23:59

-Yeah, fair point.

-Yes.

0:23:590:24:02

Unless the crisis in the Middle East is resolved,

0:24:020:24:04

along with poverty, repression, population pressure

0:24:040:24:07

and conflict even further away,

0:24:070:24:09

these small islands will remain a beacon for the desperate.

0:24:090:24:13

With 60 million people displaced by conflict around the world,

0:24:130:24:16

more than ever before, it seems likely the flow of refugees

0:24:160:24:19

and migrants trying to get into Europe isn't going to stop.

0:24:190:24:23

Migrants and refugees here want to get a ferry

0:24:230:24:26

from the port down there to take them on to Athens,

0:24:260:24:29

from where they can continue their journeys on to western

0:24:290:24:32

and northern Europe, which is where most of them seem to want to go to.

0:24:320:24:36

I continued my journey south, to the island of Crete,

0:24:380:24:41

the largest Greek island, sitting halfway between Athens and Africa.

0:24:410:24:46

Crete has its own unique history and geography.

0:24:470:24:50

While most tourists stay by the beaches,

0:24:500:24:53

the distinctive character of the people here

0:24:530:24:55

has been forged up in the mountains.

0:24:550:24:58

I'm excited about this.

0:25:030:25:05

SIMON LAUGHS

0:25:080:25:10

It's a flying trike.

0:25:100:25:11

Bonkers but brilliant.

0:25:120:25:14

-This is Jogas.

-Hello.

0:25:150:25:18

AKA Big George.

0:25:180:25:19

Working the guns there.

0:25:200:25:22

Yeah, sorry, we're just about to take off. Yeah, that's a parachute.

0:25:230:25:27

Wow.

0:25:280:25:29

I can't believe I'm going to take off on the road.

0:25:340:25:36

SIMON LAUGHS

0:25:530:25:55

Oh, my good God!

0:25:570:25:59

600,000 people live on Crete.

0:26:050:26:07

The biggest cities are on the coast,

0:26:070:26:10

'but thousands still live in remote villages up in the mountains.'

0:26:100:26:14

These mountains, this extraordinary landscape,

0:26:150:26:19

this has helped to define the people of Crete.

0:26:190:26:22

It's tough to move around in. Hard to farm.

0:26:240:26:27

It's a harsh land.

0:26:300:26:31

-Oh...

-BLEEP.

0:26:380:26:39

Don't do that.

0:26:390:26:40

SIMON CHORTLES

0:26:470:26:49

Woo-hoo! APPLAUSE

0:26:560:26:58

Very impressive, mate.

0:27:000:27:02

SIMON LAUGHS

0:27:040:27:05

-Flipping 'eck!

-Whoo!

0:27:060:27:09

The mountains, the lonely position of the island in the Med

0:27:110:27:15

and Crete's history have hardened the locals.

0:27:150:27:18

They breed them tough here.

0:27:180:27:20

Here's a sweeping statement -

0:27:200:27:22

people in the Mediterranean are just a little bit more passionate

0:27:220:27:25

and fiery than most northern Europeans.

0:27:250:27:28

People of Greece are more passionate and fiery

0:27:290:27:31

than most Mediterranean types.

0:27:310:27:33

And the people of Crete

0:27:330:27:35

are even more passionate and fiery than most Greeks.

0:27:350:27:38

'But luckily, the calming influence of the church

0:27:400:27:43

'plays an important role in Cretan life.'

0:27:430:27:45

BELL RINGS IN BACKGROUND

0:27:450:27:47

I was off to meet a local priest.

0:27:500:27:53

Father Andreas!

0:27:550:27:57

Kalimera.

0:27:580:28:00

Kalimera.

0:28:000:28:01

Very nice to meet you, sir.

0:28:010:28:03

So, this is Father Andreas.

0:28:030:28:06

ANDREAS LAUGHS

0:28:060:28:07

CHORAL SINGING Geia sas. Geia sas, geia sas...

0:28:070:28:10

-Hello.

-Hello.

0:28:170:28:18

As well as being the local priest,

0:28:180:28:20

Father Andreas is also a trained bodyguard

0:28:200:28:23

and president of the gun club.

0:28:230:28:25

He was keen to show off his skills on the club's urban warfare course.

0:28:250:28:29

GUNSHOTS AND CHORAL SINGING

0:28:290:28:30

So, Father, can we ask...?

0:28:400:28:43

You're a priest with a gun.

0:28:430:28:46

How normal is that in Crete? How normal is in that in Greece?

0:28:460:28:50

I mean, you don't carry one, do you?

0:29:020:29:04

You don't normally carry a weapon with you

0:29:040:29:06

when you're ministering to your flock?

0:29:060:29:08

'We didn't think it was a good idea

0:29:290:29:31

'to invite schoolkids onto the range.

0:29:310:29:33

'Next best...was me.'

0:29:330:29:34

-All right.

-OK.

0:29:340:29:35

Face that way. I see, OK.

0:29:380:29:39

This is a very alien thing to be doing, for a Brit, now.

0:29:390:29:44

It's just not part of our, our culture.

0:29:440:29:48

But here, it absolutely is.

0:29:490:29:51

OK. So, load?

0:29:510:29:53

-Are you ready?

-Yeah.

0:29:530:29:55

'It's hard to know exactly how many guns there are in Crete

0:29:560:29:59

'because most of them are unlicensed.'

0:29:590:30:02

'One expert told me the island was flooded with weapons

0:30:030:30:06

'when it was a smuggling route for arms heading to the Balkan wars.

0:30:060:30:10

'A study suggests

0:30:100:30:11

'there are an astonishing 600,000 unregistered guns here.

0:30:110:30:16

'That's roughly one for every man... GUNSHOT

0:30:160:30:20

'..woman... GUNSHOT

0:30:200:30:22

'..and child on the island.'

0:30:220:30:24

Bravo, bravo, Simon!

0:30:260:30:28

Ah, thank you, Father. APPLAUSE

0:30:280:30:30

You have two bullets in A zone.

0:30:320:30:34

-That's good.

-Ten points.

-Ten points?!

-Ten points.

0:30:340:30:38

Oh, I like the sound of that.

0:30:380:30:40

So, Father, when on earth would you need to be...

0:30:400:30:43

..well, shooting this number of people twice in the chest?

0:30:450:30:49

To really understand why guns mean so much to Cretans,

0:30:580:31:01

you have to look back to history.

0:31:010:31:03

'For centuries, Crete's position in the Med

0:31:030:31:06

'made it strategically vital.'

0:31:060:31:08

It's been attacked and invaded endlessly

0:31:080:31:11

by the Romans, Arabs, Vandals, Slavs, the Ottomans.

0:31:110:31:14

But it's the Germans during the Second World War

0:31:140:31:16

that locals really remember.

0:31:160:31:18

When they invaded in 1941,

0:31:200:31:22

Cretans attacked them with old rifles and clubs. The first time

0:31:220:31:26

the Germans encountered serious civilian resistance.

0:31:260:31:29

Father Andreas took me to his village, Anogia,

0:31:290:31:32

a base of the resistance movement.

0:31:320:31:34

'From here, fighters attacked Nazi troops

0:31:340:31:37

'and helped British agents kidnap a Nazi general,

0:31:370:31:39

'acts for which the Germans took brutal revenge.'

0:31:390:31:42

So it's got an order from the German general commander

0:31:440:31:47

of the garrison of Crete, "We order the complete destruction of Anogia

0:31:470:31:52

"and the execution of every male person of Anogia

0:31:520:31:55

"who would happen to be within the village and around it

0:31:550:31:58

"within a distance of 1km."

0:31:580:32:00

'Villagers were killed

0:32:030:32:05

'and every house in the village was burnt down or blown up.'

0:32:050:32:07

Goodness me.

0:32:070:32:09

-That's your family name, is it?

-Yes, and another. Oh...

0:32:120:32:16

'More than ten members of Father Andreas' own family

0:32:160:32:19

'were killed during the occupation.'

0:32:190:32:21

'The German occupation of Greece was savage.

0:32:400:32:43

'Up to 300,000 Greeks died of starvation alone during the war.'

0:32:430:32:48

What would happen if a person came here

0:32:580:33:01

and defaced the flag?

0:33:010:33:03

So they wouldn't leave the village alive?

0:33:080:33:10

'What happened here during the war

0:33:180:33:20

'still affects the way many Greeks feel about Germany.

0:33:200:33:24

'Father Andreas took me to meet some younger men from the area.'

0:33:240:33:28

Here we are.

0:33:460:33:48

GUNSHOTS

0:33:500:33:52

SHEEP BLEAT IN BACKGROUND Bloody hell.

0:33:560:33:58

So this is a traditional greeting.

0:34:010:34:03

It's OK.

0:34:030:34:04

Geia sas.

0:34:040:34:06

'These shepherds spend much of the year up here in the mountains.'

0:34:060:34:10

Shepherds' huts like this were used as hideouts

0:34:100:34:13

by resistance fighters during the Nazi occupation.

0:34:130:34:16

Do you think it is, it is the land

0:34:230:34:26

that has made Cretans tough,

0:34:260:34:29

or is it events that have happened here?

0:34:290:34:32

The people of Crete fought heroically in the war.

0:34:490:34:52

Even after the Germans massacred locals,

0:34:520:34:55

the Cretans carried on fighting.

0:34:550:34:58

THEY TALK IN GREEK

0:34:580:35:01

-Simon!

-Eviva!

-Eviva!

0:35:010:35:03

Thank you.

0:35:050:35:07

CLICKING AND GUNSHOTS

0:35:080:35:11

You do love your guns.

0:35:140:35:16

THEY TALK IN GREEK

0:35:160:35:17

That's spectacular.

0:35:220:35:23

This is absolutely spectacular.

0:35:250:35:27

Do you want to play?

0:35:270:35:29

-Do I want to play?

-With a gun?

0:35:290:35:31

SIMON LAUGHS

0:35:310:35:33

We think of the Second World War as being - some people do, anyway -

0:35:400:35:44

as being such a long time ago, from a different era.

0:35:440:35:48

But here, this carries a lot of memories with it,

0:35:480:35:51

carries a lot of emotions for the guys here.

0:35:510:35:54

It's still very much part of life here today.

0:35:540:35:57

It's not history.

0:35:580:35:59

It's here in the now.

0:36:010:36:02

Many Greeks blame their current financial crisis on Germany,

0:36:020:36:07

and I think politicians and bankers in Germany and Brussels

0:36:070:36:10

should shoulder some responsibility.

0:36:100:36:13

But these Cretans view the crisis as an extension of the War.

0:36:130:36:17

IN GREEK:

0:36:170:36:21

Does it really feel like that to you, then, that Germany now is

0:36:360:36:40

trying to do what Germany failed to do during the Second World War, that

0:36:400:36:43

it's trying to take over Greece and perhaps the rest of Europe as well?

0:36:430:36:48

IN GREEK:

0:36:480:36:50

THEY PLAY BOUZOUKI

0:37:190:37:25

THEY SING CRETAN SONG

0:37:250:37:31

GUNFIRE

0:37:330:37:37

Where I'm staying tonight, it's like a...I suppose,

0:37:500:37:53

a fortified little stone shepherd's hut, almost.

0:37:530:37:58

It's quite an astonishing construction.

0:37:580:38:00

Come and have a look inside.

0:38:000:38:02

Look at that - hole in the roof.

0:38:050:38:07

Amazing.

0:38:080:38:09

As long as this inflatable mattress doesn't burst, I'll be all right.

0:38:130:38:19

Night-night.

0:38:200:38:21

BLEATING

0:38:270:38:29

Well, the bed didn't pop and deflate,

0:38:400:38:42

which I'm very relieved about.

0:38:420:38:45

Oh, but it was so cold!

0:38:470:38:49

It's quite weird, in sunny Greece, to have your feet

0:38:500:38:53

turn into blocks of ice.

0:38:530:38:55

And it's daylight. Up and on.

0:38:570:39:00

It's not surprising that Crete

0:39:060:39:08

and the whole of Greece is dominated by its past.

0:39:080:39:11

I headed to one of the most extraordinary

0:39:130:39:15

archaeological sites in the country.

0:39:150:39:17

The Palace of Knossos was the centre of the Minoan civilisation,

0:39:190:39:23

which was at its peak around 4,000 years ago.

0:39:230:39:26

Back then, around 100,000 people lived here.

0:39:270:39:30

It was Europe's first city.

0:39:300:39:32

Much of what was built here was constructed

0:39:320:39:35

1,000 years before the heyday of classical Greece.

0:39:350:39:39

Many scholars think this was the first great European civilisation.

0:39:400:39:45

Knossos and countless other wonders across the country

0:39:480:39:52

are why Greece is considered the bedrock of Western civilisation.

0:39:520:39:56

And it was very that sense of history that meant Europe

0:39:580:40:02

was desperate to incorporate Greece into the eurozone, the euro project.

0:40:020:40:07

Even the euro symbol was based on a Greek letter,

0:40:070:40:11

and that was to give a sense that this was the inevitable

0:40:110:40:14

consequence of the evolution of European civilisation.

0:40:140:40:18

So Europe wanted Greece inside the euro project.

0:40:190:40:23

The trouble was, many now think

0:40:240:40:26

Greece wasn't economically or politically ready.

0:40:260:40:29

When Greece gained entry to the single currency in 2001,

0:40:290:40:33

its economy was still relatively undeveloped.

0:40:330:40:36

Greece didn't actually meet the requirements for membership

0:40:360:40:39

of the euro, but Europe turned a blind eye.

0:40:390:40:42

I headed to Athens, Greece's capital, to see the consequences.

0:40:440:40:48

Once inside the euro,

0:40:530:40:55

Greece was able to borrow money at very low rates

0:40:550:40:58

from bankers who were only too keen to peddle huge loans.

0:40:580:41:01

The ancient city of Athens had huge sums spent on it as the country

0:41:040:41:07

went on an astonishing spree of borrowing and spending.

0:41:070:41:11

Successive governments spent as much money as they could get hold of.

0:41:120:41:16

Hospitals, roads and airports were all upgraded,

0:41:160:41:20

and the Athens subway got a costly makeover.

0:41:200:41:22

So this is the very clean, very cool Athens subway system - built for

0:41:270:41:32

the 2004 Olympics at enormous cost, you will not be surprised to know.

0:41:320:41:37

Very well air-conditioned down here.

0:41:370:41:39

It's like a fridge compared to the furnace outside.

0:41:390:41:41

It's got one very peculiar characteristic

0:41:410:41:43

that you notice immediately as a traveller from abroad,

0:41:430:41:46

which is that it's basically run on a sort of honesty system.

0:41:460:41:49

There are no turnstiles here.

0:41:490:41:51

You get your ticket over there and then you validate it,

0:41:510:41:54

but strangely, not everybody seems to get a ticket.

0:41:540:41:57

Many massive projects like this cost a fortune, were run badly

0:41:590:42:03

and racked up huge losses.

0:42:030:42:04

Between 2000 and 2010, government spending rocketed.

0:42:050:42:09

The public sector wage bill doubled.

0:42:090:42:12

Almost everyone wanted a piece of the pie.

0:42:120:42:15

Politicians and the media completely failed to alert the public

0:42:150:42:18

to what was going on as the country went a bit bonkers.

0:42:180:42:22

One of the biggest drains on the public purse

0:42:220:42:24

became the ludicrously generous pension system.

0:42:240:42:27

Millions of Greeks got caught up in this system, in this madness,

0:42:270:42:32

because hundreds of professions

0:42:320:42:34

managed to get themselves classified as arduous,

0:42:340:42:38

including hairdressers, musicians,

0:42:380:42:41

waiters, even TV presenters.

0:42:410:42:44

And that classification meant they could retire

0:42:440:42:47

much earlier than normal and with most of their final salary.

0:42:470:42:51

It's a fantastic idea, but how the hell do you pay for it?

0:42:510:42:56

Sadly, they couldn't.

0:42:570:42:59

People didn't pay their taxes, especially the wealthy,

0:43:000:43:03

and there was rampant corruption.

0:43:030:43:06

The Greek financial crisis really got going in 2009

0:43:060:43:09

when the government finally admitted its vast debt

0:43:090:43:12

was hundreds of billions of euros, much more than anyone realised.

0:43:120:43:16

The Greek government needed a bail-out,

0:43:160:43:18

and in return, European creditors demanded swingeing austerity.

0:43:180:43:23

Pensions and benefits for the poorest were cut.

0:43:230:43:26

Riots and strikes followed.

0:43:260:43:28

Unemployment in Greece has soared to 25%.

0:43:280:43:32

Among the young, it's even higher.

0:43:320:43:34

Goodness me, look at this place!

0:43:340:43:37

A fifth of the population now live below the poverty line.

0:43:370:43:40

I headed to the outskirts of Athens to a community of homes

0:43:420:43:45

made largely from shipping containers.

0:43:450:43:47

Many residents here rely on donations of bread to survive.

0:43:470:43:51

How would you describe the health of this community at the moment?

0:43:530:43:56

IN GREEK:

0:43:560:43:59

Irini and Petros live in a converted shipping container

0:44:190:44:22

with their children.

0:44:220:44:23

And this is the home?

0:44:270:44:29

So you've got the shipping container there

0:44:290:44:30

and then you've built out from it?

0:44:300:44:33

IN GREEK:

0:44:330:44:38

But this is where you're sleeping in here? Can we have a look?

0:44:450:44:47

'The entire family sleep in this tiny home.'

0:44:490:44:52

So you can see you've got beds here, a couple of beds here.

0:44:550:44:59

Are people sleeping here?

0:44:590:45:01

IN GREEK:

0:45:010:45:02

Obviously, on planet Earth, I have seen worse,

0:45:030:45:06

but not, frankly, in Europe.

0:45:060:45:08

IN GREEK:

0:45:100:45:12

It's the poor and the weak who are suffering most in this crisis.

0:45:270:45:31

The rich elites are insulated in wealthy suburbs.

0:45:310:45:34

Meanwhile, the city of Athens has seen its budget slashed by 40% in

0:45:350:45:39

five years and some of its essential services are starting to crumble.

0:45:390:45:44

I went to visit a local landmark, a symbol of the rotten state of

0:45:440:45:47

the Greek establishment - a hill that's been steadily growing.

0:45:470:45:52

I can't quite believe this,

0:45:520:45:53

but I'm starting to think we might be driving up a mountain of waste.

0:45:530:45:59

Oh, my God!

0:46:000:46:02

6,000 tonnes of rubbish arrive here every day.

0:46:020:46:06

So this is one of the largest landfill sites in the world.

0:46:060:46:11

Shambolic political leadership is a major reason

0:46:110:46:14

Greece has one of the lowest recycling rates in Europe.

0:46:140:46:18

The Greeks send 80% of their waste to landfill - double the EU average.

0:46:180:46:23

The most extraordinary thing happens here when a lorry goes past.

0:46:230:46:27

Just look - watch the earth underneath it.

0:46:270:46:30

Look at that!

0:46:300:46:31

The ground is bouncing, because the ground isn't earth.

0:46:310:46:36

It's compacted rubbish,

0:46:360:46:38

it's thousands of plastic bottles under there.

0:46:380:46:43

This site's an environmental disaster

0:46:430:46:45

that should have been closed long ago.

0:46:450:46:47

Greece has a national rubbish problem,

0:46:490:46:51

with scores of huge illegal dumps.

0:46:510:46:54

The government isn't forcing Greeks to recycle, so this mountain

0:46:540:46:57

of rubbish just keeps getting bigger and bigger and bigger.

0:46:570:47:01

The scale of this place is extraordinary.

0:47:020:47:06

It covers square miles, and it is said to be half a kilometre deep.

0:47:060:47:12

Imagine that!

0:47:140:47:16

Rubbish pickers go through the garbage - deadly work.

0:47:160:47:20

Several pickers have been killed here, buried under waste.

0:47:200:47:24

Oh, my God! There are children working here.

0:47:240:47:27

There are allegations of corruption around the landfill, of local

0:47:280:47:31

businessmen making vast profits by dumping waste here illegally.

0:47:310:47:36

Dangerous medical waste and toxic chemicals

0:47:360:47:38

have also been found here - even radioactive waste.

0:47:380:47:41

And high levels of carcinogens

0:47:410:47:43

have been recorded in the surrounding area.

0:47:430:47:45

This is not a country in sub-Saharan Africa or Southeast Asia.

0:47:480:47:54

This is Europe, 2015.

0:47:540:47:56

As the Greek establishment fails to resolve the country's problems

0:47:580:48:02

and austerity measures bite deep, people are getting angry.

0:48:020:48:05

I headed to an area of Athens called Exarcheia -

0:48:160:48:19

the heart of the city's protest movement.

0:48:190:48:23

I met up with an activist called Antonis.

0:48:230:48:25

If you think of the way democracy has, you know, been involved

0:48:280:48:32

and what has become of it in terms of nonsense and parliaments,

0:48:320:48:38

people with no respect to their voters and so on, it's very easy

0:48:380:48:42

to understand that there are some hundreds of people

0:48:420:48:45

deciding for millions.

0:48:450:48:46

So people say, no, we need to decide for ourselves!

0:48:460:48:50

The anger many people feel with the status quo has led to a growth in

0:48:510:48:55

support for the anarchist movement, which is centred in Exarcheia.

0:48:550:48:59

Riots and clashes with police have become common here.

0:49:010:49:04

'Exarcheia's central square is a kind of spiritual home

0:49:060:49:08

'for anarchists, and this area's played a huge role

0:49:080:49:11

'in bringing change to Greece in the past.'

0:49:110:49:13

Would you say, actually, some of the most important events

0:49:160:49:19

in modern Greek history happened around here, then?

0:49:190:49:23

It's a place that combines all that political thought

0:49:230:49:26

with all that history,

0:49:260:49:29

and it's very difficult for someone to see...

0:49:290:49:32

IN GREEK:

0:49:340:49:35

Can we ask what he's upset about?

0:49:430:49:44

Because of the camera.

0:49:440:49:46

We should...we should...we should...we should...we should...

0:49:460:49:49

-We should leave now.

-OK.

-OK?

0:49:490:49:50

'A few rich people control almost all of Greece's media,

0:49:520:49:56

'ensuring even a foreign TV crew are hated by many here.'

0:49:560:49:58

OK, all right. Let's put the camera down, then.

0:50:000:50:02

-Yeah.

-Is there a card you can take out?

0:50:020:50:05

IN GREEK:

0:50:050:50:07

Explain to these guys, until...

0:50:090:50:11

We've basically just been run out of Exarcheia by a couple of...

0:50:260:50:30

teenage scumbags, frankly,

0:50:300:50:33

threatening to...threatening to kill our cameraman.

0:50:330:50:35

Is there a significant part of young people in Greece who are heading

0:50:350:50:40

in that direction, who are so angry, they're just raging against it?

0:50:400:50:43

Of course it is, of course it is, of course it is.

0:50:430:50:45

Because when you have all these pillars of the establishment

0:50:450:50:50

being torn away and being rotten, whatever relates to

0:50:500:50:55

the establishment is automatically a target to attack.

0:50:550:51:00

-The enemy?

-Of course.

0:51:000:51:02

That evening, I headed with Antonis to a different part of the city

0:51:030:51:07

where a protest march had been planned.

0:51:070:51:09

Yeah, we need to be careful with the camera now, guys.

0:51:110:51:14

And are we OK here or shall we stop?

0:51:150:51:18

-We should stop now.

-OK.

0:51:180:51:20

The protest had already turned violent.

0:51:200:51:23

We're holding the camera down because there are, God knows who,

0:51:240:51:28

demonstrators with petrol bombs and a lot of young masked men.

0:51:280:51:32

The protesters headed up the street, starting fires.

0:51:340:51:37

Athens had seen a lot of this.

0:51:370:51:39

Normal life is going on around us and there's, you know,

0:51:430:51:45

even a bar on my left.

0:51:450:51:47

The cafes are open here.

0:51:510:51:52

So now we're going to have a confrontation.

0:51:580:52:02

They're ready to do stuff.

0:52:020:52:03

Here we go!

0:52:060:52:07

Petrol bombs are being thrown. EXPLOSION

0:52:080:52:11

CHANTING

0:52:110:52:14

Watch this side.

0:52:180:52:19

Those police are going in for an attack now.

0:52:200:52:22

Police running in, bottles being thrown.

0:52:260:52:28

-PROTESTOR:

-Zito!

0:52:310:52:32

This is the sort of story of Athens at the moment, isn't it?

0:52:400:52:43

I mean, there is a lot of chaos

0:52:430:52:45

and lawlessness, in the conventional sense.

0:52:450:52:48

People are raging from all sides against everything, it appears.

0:52:480:52:52

The youth unemployment rate in Greece is more than 50%.

0:52:540:52:58

It's not hard to see why so many young Greeks are lashing out.

0:52:580:53:01

Many of the young are very politicised.

0:53:040:53:08

They are very angry and particularly angry at the older generation here

0:53:080:53:11

who they think have screwed up Greece.

0:53:110:53:14

SIRENS BLARE

0:53:210:53:25

If any one group's mostly to blame for Greece's situation,

0:53:320:53:35

I'd pin it on the wealthy elite who helped themselves to

0:53:350:53:37

vast portions from the Greek gravy train.

0:53:370:53:41

The crisis has hardly touched the rich.

0:53:410:53:43

The gap between wealthy and poor here has actually widened recently.

0:53:430:53:47

Greece now has the highest income inequality in Europe.

0:53:470:53:50

God, this is a nice-looking area. Lovely houses.

0:53:520:53:56

Good smattering of pretty expensive vehicles.

0:53:560:54:00

A very nice place.

0:54:010:54:02

To get a sense of how much the elite have taken this country for a ride,

0:54:040:54:08

I wanted to take a look in their back gardens,

0:54:080:54:11

but they don't make it easy.

0:54:110:54:12

This is discreet wealth.

0:54:130:54:15

Lots of fencing and quite high bushes

0:54:150:54:19

slightly obscuring the view in.

0:54:190:54:22

It's difficult to get a sense of what lies behind, but we have a way.

0:54:230:54:27

Since the crisis began,

0:54:300:54:31

the wealthy have been a bit more reluctant to show off their cash.

0:54:310:54:34

So we're just going past a place here

0:54:390:54:41

that's got CCTV cameras outside and a security booth.

0:54:410:54:45

I'm just seeing... I want to go somewhere in the middle.

0:54:450:54:49

-OK, OK.

-Somewhere on the left.

-So we go left here, then?

0:54:490:54:52

Yeah, left here.

0:54:520:54:53

Hopefully we won't get spotted.

0:54:530:54:56

I think we're good here.

0:54:560:54:57

We're going to try and have a look at this area from up high...

0:54:590:55:04

..over the fences.

0:55:070:55:08

I'd enlisted the help of a drone pilot called Tassos.

0:55:110:55:14

This is already giving us

0:55:180:55:20

a quite extraordinary view of the neighbourhood.

0:55:200:55:23

The houses are massive!

0:55:230:55:26

Flipping 'eck!

0:55:260:55:27

'Of course, there's no suggestion

0:55:270:55:29

'anyone here has done anything wrong.'

0:55:290:55:31

Look at the size of that swimming pool!

0:55:310:55:33

So just in that frame, I can see one, two, three,

0:55:330:55:36

four swimming pools.

0:55:360:55:38

Now, that is interesting because there is a tax

0:55:390:55:42

or effectively a tax on swimming pools in Greece,

0:55:420:55:46

and one of the revelations

0:55:460:55:48

that came out during and after the financial crisis was that

0:55:480:55:52

only 300 households in this area, in Kifissia, had admitted,

0:55:520:55:58

declared, that they had a swimming pool and paid the proper fee.

0:55:580:56:02

And when investigators started looking,

0:56:020:56:05

they started to realise there were considerably more.

0:56:050:56:08

MUSIC: Summer Holiday by Cliff Richard and The Shadows

0:56:080:56:11

# We're all going on a summer holiday

0:56:150:56:19

# No more working for a week or two... #

0:56:190:56:22

Look at this! One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten,

0:56:220:56:26

11, 12, 13, 14, 15! More are coming in.

0:56:260:56:30

Looks like every house here has got a pool.

0:56:300:56:33

The estimate now is that there are 20,000 in this area.

0:56:340:56:39

So just a few hundred households of those tens of thousands

0:56:400:56:45

were paying the appropriate tax to the state.

0:56:450:56:47

When the economic crisis hit the country, the response of

0:56:490:56:52

many rich Greeks wasn't exactly patriotic.

0:56:520:56:55

They shifted billions out of the country,

0:56:550:56:58

buying property in London or stuffing it into tax havens.

0:56:580:57:01

The reaction of many of the elite who live in this sort of area

0:57:040:57:09

wasn't, "All right, fair cop, we haven't paid the tax, we will now."

0:57:090:57:14

No! What they did was go and cover them

0:57:140:57:17

with artificial turf or plywood to disguise them.

0:57:170:57:21

The financial crisis here exposed the many failings of the state.

0:57:280:57:32

It's clear to me Greece needs profound political

0:57:330:57:36

and social change to recover and thrive.

0:57:360:57:38

And now, the traditional ruling parties here,

0:57:400:57:42

which mismanaged the country and the economy

0:57:420:57:44

so badly for so long, have been thrown out of power.

0:57:440:57:47

Greece is trying to move on.

0:57:490:57:51

I've come to the end of the first leg of my journey around Greece.

0:57:550:57:59

It's been a real surprise for me.

0:57:590:58:01

The place is more beautiful and the people are more passionate

0:58:010:58:06

and angry than I realised.

0:58:060:58:08

I'm really looking forward to the next leg of my journey,

0:58:080:58:12

which is going to take me to the rugged, mountainous north.

0:58:120:58:15

'Next time, I'll meet some of Greece's wonderful wildlife.'

0:58:150:58:19

We're in Greece - there are bears here!

0:58:190:58:21

'I'll see how the country dug itself into a hole...'

0:58:220:58:25

It's gone, it's gone! Let's go! Quick, quick, quick, quick!

0:58:250:58:29

EXPLOSION

0:58:290:58:30

'..and I'll spend time with some rebel monks.'

0:58:300:58:33

God, it looks like we're arriving at a medieval settlement.

0:58:330:58:36

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