‘Our lives over their profits’—huge Greek general strike demands justice over train crash

Workers in Greece staged the country’s largest general strike in decades on 28 February, on the two-year anniversary of the Tempe train crash in 2023.

There were huge rallies in Athens and Thessaloniki as well as across the Greek mainland and islands and even internationally. The crowd in Athens was estimated to be over one million people.

There were an estimated 380 demonstrations globally, including here in Australia in Melbourne, Sydney and Perth.

The crash in the Tempe Valley in Greece was an unprecedented state crime. Two trains, one carrying more than 350 passengers, crashed while running in the opposite direction on the same line. Fifty-seven people died with many others injured.

Train workers and unions had repeatedly warned that an “accident” like this was waiting to happen. The privatisation of the train system has meant prioritising profits over safety and people’s lives. The result is mass understaffing (with just 590 workers now employed compared to 3200 before 2012) and run down trains and technology, including the lack of communications systems that caused the crash.

Kyriakos Mitsotakis’ right-wing government attempted a cover-up following the disaster. The site was bulldozed, hiding and destroying evidence, and the government tried to blame the station master on shift.

But the government is widely seen as complicit in the crash, which has become a symbol of the failures of the Greek state.

The strike saw the organised working class united to demand “the collapse of the murderers’ government” and chanting that privatisations kill.

Schools, hospitals, hospitality venues, the public sector, trains, ports, factories and shops were all shut for the strike. Striking train, bus and even taxi drivers worked for free to take protestors to the rallies.

The Greek Palestinian community, survivors of the Pylos refugee boat disaster and migrant workers were all present, alongside countless banners and contingents from unions, high-school and university students.

They defied the government’s desperate attempts to scare people away, including by unleashing thousands of cops who violently attacked protestors with tear gas.

Mitsotakis’ New Democracy party controls a majority of seats and has survived a confidence motion in parliament. But one thing is clear: neither his government nor the weak parliamentary opposition can bring the justice that people are demanding.

The workers’ movement is fighting to escalate the strikes, reverse privatisation and nationalise the entire transport system as well as address the failures of other public services like education and health, and demand a society organised to meet workers’ needs not bosses profits.

Magazine

Solidarity meetings

Latest articles

Read more

Greek Nazis jailed in victory for the anti-fascist movement

The leadership of Greece’s Nazi Golden Dawn party is behind bars, with leader Nikos Michaloliakos and six other former MPs sentenced to 13 years’ jail and another 11 former MPs to between five and seven years.

Pensions battle sees general strike in Greece—against Syriza

An enormous general strike in February saw tens of thousands of people march in Greek cities against an attack on pensions—now coming from the Syriza government.

General strikes in Greece—this time against Syriza’s austerity

The fight against Syriza’s austerity measures in Greece has begun, with workers staging two general strikes in the space of three weeks.