The China Mail - Greek women confront macho culture fuelling femicides

USD -
AED 3.67305
AFN 66.496721
ALL 83.872087
AMD 382.480316
ANG 1.789982
AOA 917.000151
ARS 1450.743722
AUD 1.543543
AWG 1.805
AZN 1.721313
BAM 1.69722
BBD 2.01352
BDT 122.007836
BGN 1.69435
BHD 0.376961
BIF 2952.5
BMD 1
BND 1.304378
BOB 6.907594
BRL 5.350197
BSD 0.999679
BTN 88.558647
BWP 13.450775
BYN 3.407125
BYR 19600
BZD 2.010578
CAD 1.41132
CDF 2154.999794
CHF 0.806245
CLF 0.024029
CLP 942.659758
CNY 7.11935
CNH 7.122085
COP 3784.25
CRC 502.442792
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 95.849785
CZK 21.08085
DJF 177.720149
DKK 6.46669
DOP 64.301661
DZD 130.471267
EGP 47.303968
ERN 15
ETB 153.49263
EUR 0.86605
FJD 2.28525
FKP 0.766404
GBP 0.76133
GEL 2.715005
GGP 0.766404
GHS 10.92632
GIP 0.766404
GMD 73.510149
GNF 8677.881382
GTQ 7.6608
GYD 209.15339
HKD 7.774805
HNL 26.286056
HRK 6.524997
HTG 130.827172
HUF 334.350298
IDR 16686.5
ILS 3.261445
IMP 0.766404
INR 88.675601
IQD 1309.660176
IRR 42112.499919
ISK 126.620161
JEP 0.766404
JMD 160.35857
JOD 0.709006
JPY 153.072498
KES 129.14997
KGS 87.450262
KHR 4012.669762
KMF 420.999708
KPW 900.033283
KRW 1448.119782
KWD 0.306898
KYD 0.833167
KZT 526.13127
LAK 21717.265947
LBP 89523.367365
LKR 304.861328
LRD 182.946302
LSL 17.373217
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 5.466197
MAD 9.311066
MDL 17.114592
MGA 4508.159378
MKD 53.394772
MMK 2099.044592
MNT 3585.031206
MOP 8.005051
MRU 39.997917
MUR 45.999381
MVR 15.405019
MWK 1733.486063
MXN 18.57444
MYR 4.18297
MZN 63.960351
NAD 17.373217
NGN 1438.169534
NIO 36.78522
NOK 10.201703
NPR 141.693568
NZD 1.774497
OMR 0.384501
PAB 0.999779
PEN 3.375927
PGK 4.279045
PHP 58.997504
PKR 282.679805
PLN 3.68034
PYG 7081.988268
QAR 3.643566
RON 4.403984
RSD 101.501994
RUB 81.251088
RWF 1452.596867
SAR 3.750504
SBD 8.223823
SCR 15.060272
SDG 600.496692
SEK 9.5646
SGD 1.304202
SHP 0.750259
SLE 23.197134
SLL 20969.499529
SOS 571.349231
SRD 38.503497
STD 20697.981008
STN 21.260533
SVC 8.747304
SYP 11056.895466
SZL 17.359159
THB 32.399408
TJS 9.227278
TMT 3.5
TND 2.959939
TOP 2.342104
TRY 42.099355
TTD 6.773954
TWD 30.984983
TZS 2459.806975
UAH 42.066455
UGX 3491.096532
UYU 39.813947
UZS 11966.746503
VES 227.27225
VND 26315
VUV 122.169446
WST 2.82328
XAF 569.234174
XAG 0.020825
XAU 0.000251
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.801686
XDR 0.70875
XOF 569.231704
XPF 103.489719
YER 238.483762
ZAR 17.37062
ZMK 9001.20436
ZMW 22.61803
ZWL 321.999592
  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    23.78

    -0.21%

  • SCS

    -0.1700

    15.76

    -1.08%

  • BCC

    -0.6500

    70.73

    -0.92%

  • CMSD

    0.0000

    24.01

    0%

  • BCE

    0.7800

    23.17

    +3.37%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    76

    0%

  • RIO

    0.2100

    69.27

    +0.3%

  • GSK

    0.4100

    47.1

    +0.87%

  • NGG

    0.9200

    76.29

    +1.21%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.75

    -0.15%

  • RYCEF

    0.0600

    15

    +0.4%

  • BTI

    0.3300

    54.21

    +0.61%

  • RELX

    -1.1900

    43.39

    -2.74%

  • VOD

    0.0700

    11.34

    +0.62%

  • BP

    0.1400

    35.82

    +0.39%

  • AZN

    2.6200

    83.77

    +3.13%

Greek women confront macho culture fuelling femicides
Greek women confront macho culture fuelling femicides / Photo: © AFP/File

Greek women confront macho culture fuelling femicides

As a group of senior Greek coastguard officers sat down for a routine video call last June, the meeting opened with femicide jokes.

Text size:

"I told my wife, you better behave or I'm getting a pilot's licence. She froze!" sniggered one officer in a video leaked this month by a local news portal after a Greek helicopter pilot murdered his wife last May.

"That's the way to teach them, my friend," replied another participant.

"Didn't all little girls want to marry pilots when they were young?" laughed a third officer.

The men were mocking the murder of 20-year-old Briton Caroline Crouch by her Greek husband, Babis Anagnostopoulos, as she slept.

For over a month, he tried to present it as a botched burglary before confessing to the crime that sparked outrage in Greece.

Crouch's killing was one of dozens of similar cases in Greece in recent years, including the gruesome rape and killing of American scientist Suzanne Eaton on the island of Crete in 2019.

On average, Greece records 11 femicides per year, deputy minister for gender equality, Maria Syrengela, told parliament in January.

She added that a special hotline for abuse complaints had received nearly 7,000 calls last year.

A belated #MeToo awakening in Greece has shed more light on abuse of women in the country.

But Greek activists say the conservative country has yet to fully dismantle traditional, patriarchal attitudes that lead to violence against women, while many have called for a separate crime charge for femicide.

- Women 'should not talk much' -

Macho culture has deep roots in Greece, say Eleftheria Koumandou and Eleonora Orfanidou, co-hosts of an award-winning daily show on Athens 9,84 city radio that regularly addresses social issues including misogyny and homophobia.

"A young girl (growing up) in Greece has centuries of tradition to deal with," Orfanidou told AFP.

"Greek education, the church and justice are conservative institutions built on the patriarchal model," she adds.

Koumandou says her mother, who gave up studying dentistry to avoid "offending" her marble mason husband, would say women "should not talk much".

"We were taught not to display too much intelligence," notes Orfanidou.

Greece first gave women the vote in 1952, and in 2020 elected its first woman head of state, former judge Katerina Sakellaropoulou.

But conservative Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis -- whose sister was Greece's first female Athens mayor and foreign minister -- has just two women ministers in his cabinet of 21.

Beatings of women were common in film a few decades ago -- frequently for comic relief -- while so-called honour killings over jealousy and adultery featured in popular song lyrics.

"In my school dance group, a folk song about a man who butchers his wife and then mourns her was among our favourites," recalls Orfanidou.

Many Greek films from the 1950s to the 1970s, considered the golden era of domestic cinema and routinely replayed on television, promote the bourgeois family model with the man at the head of the household, says Fotini Tsibiridou, a social anthropologist at the University of Macedonia.

- 'Caressed and slapped' -

In a 1966 hit comedy that sold over 420,000 tickets, the protagonist lines up his six sisters and slaps them for bickering.

"I want to be caressed and slapped by the man I love," says a song from the same era.

Contemporary Greek TV soaps and advertisements are still rife with "sexist references and stereotypes," Tsibiridou adds.

"For instance, you won't see a man buying or using house cleaning products in a Greek TV ad," she says.

In 2016, Greece's leading toy chain Jumbo sparked controversy with an advertisement featuring the line "hit like a man".

In another tongue-in-cheek advertisement from a cell phone chain in 2011, a man, unhappy with his wife's cooking, daydreams about returning her to her mother.

Critics also note Greek law penalises victims of domestic violence by giving lighter sentences to perpetrators who can prove they were in a state of agitation during the crime.

Proof of being in what the penal code calls "a fit of rage" can mean the difference between a life sentence and a reduced term.

This is the line of defence used by Crouch's husband Anagnostopoulos, whose lawyer this month told reporters that his client "was in a state of psychological arousal" when he committed the crime "in the heat of passion".

A few days after the coastguard video mocking Crouch's death leaked, the merchant marine ministry condemned the comments through an anonymous source. No official statement was issued.

J.Liv--ThChM