logo
Greek lawmaker arrested for attacking ‘offensive' paintings in Athens

Greek lawmaker arrested for attacking ‘offensive' paintings in Athens

Euronews11-03-2025
Nikolaos Papadopoulos, of the small right-wing, ultra-religious Niki party, attacked the paintings in The National Gallery - Alexandros Soutsos Museum. The exhibition includes works that caricature religious icons and themes.
ADVERTISEMENT
Greece's National Gallery said a Greek lawmaker attacked four paintings in an exhibition at the museum in Athens, including one he had previously criticized as offensive on religious grounds.
The National Gallery - Alexandros Soutsos Museum shut down after the attack, with visitors turned away.
Police detained Nikolaos Papadopoulos - of the small right-wing, ultra-religious Niki party which holds 10 of parliament's 300 seats - for several hours on Monday before releasing him.
The museum issued a statement saying Papadopoulos and one other person attacked the paintings that were part of an exhibition of Greek artists titled 'The Allure of the Bizarre,' throwing them to the floor and shattering glass in the frames.
The exhibition includes works that caricature religious icons and themes, and runs as an accompaniment to a display of 80 engravings by the Spanish master Francisco Goya.
Papadopoulos previously said in parliament that one of the Greek paintings was offensive to Orthodox Christianity, the predominant religion in Greece, asserting that it insulted the Virgin Mary and Christ.
'I took down four icons, four blasphemous icons, and in two of those ... the glass pane broke, nothing else,' Papadopoulos told reporters after he was released. He said works at the exhibition 'insult the Virgin Mary, St George ... the archangels that we in our homes were taught to worship and respect.'
In a statement issued Monday evening, the gallery's board of directors said it 'unreservedly condemn(s) every act of vandalism, violence and censorship which violate the constitutionally guaranteed freedom of expression.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

UK trade envoy resigns over visit to occupied northern Cyprus
UK trade envoy resigns over visit to occupied northern Cyprus

Euronews

time19 hours ago

  • Euronews

UK trade envoy resigns over visit to occupied northern Cyprus

Labour MP and UK trade envoy to Turkey Afzal Khan has resigned after criticism over his visit to the Turkish-occupied north of Cyprus on 8 August. The territory is not recognised Britain or any other country except Turkey, after declaring itself the "Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus" following Turkey's invasion and occupation of the north of the island in 1974. Khan told reporters that he paid for the trip himself and was visiting his family, as well as receiving an honorary degree from a university. During his trip, however, he also met with Turkish Cypriot leader Ersin Tatar. This caused considerable backlash from the Cypriot government as well as within the UK. The internationally recognised government of the Republic of Cyprus, which is based in the island nation's predominantly Greek-speaking south, called his actions at the time "absolutely condemnable and unacceptable". The UK Foreign Office said last week in a statement this week that Mr Khan's visit "was undertaken in a personal capacity," before accepting his resignation on Friday. A statement from the Cypriot foreign ministry on Saturday welcomed his resignation, calling it "an important development, which at this particular time has even greater significance." In a letter to British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, Khan said he felt it was "best to stand down at this time so not to distract from the hard work the government is doing to secure the best possible trade deals for this country." Just last month, Cyprus marked 51 years since the Turkish military invasion that led to the island nation's partition. Turkey's invasion came in the immediate aftermath of a coup staged by Athens junta-backed supporters of uniting Cyprus with Greece. Currently, only Turkey recognises the Turkish Cypriot declaration of independence and maintains 35,000 troops in the north. Talks to reunite the country have been ongoing, but meetings that took place in New York between the two sides in July concluded without resolving key disputes.

Trauma lingers in Greece, 10 years after austerity referendum
Trauma lingers in Greece, 10 years after austerity referendum

LeMonde

time2 days ago

  • LeMonde

Trauma lingers in Greece, 10 years after austerity referendum

Katerina Grapsa, a shopkeeper in central Athens, vividly remembers "that summer of 2015, the summer of all dangers," when she almost lost everything, like so many other Greeks. On June 27, the woman in her sixties woke up to learn that Alexis Tsipras, the left-wing prime minister from the Syriza party who had been elected just in January, had announced at 1:20 am that a referendum would be held on July 5. It was to decide whether to reject the third austerity plan imposed by the "troika" (the International Monetary Fund, the European Central Bank and the European Commission) since the beginning of the debt crisis in 2010. The next day, June 28, after the Eurogroup – which brings together the finance ministers of the eurozone countries – refused to extend Greece's loan agreement and capital flight accelerated, the Greek prime minister announced capital controls and the temporary closure of Greek banks until after the vote. Greeks could withdraw only €60 per day, and businesses could no longer pay their employees or suppliers. Greece found itself at an impasse. "While standing in line at the ATM, we laughed at the absurdity of it all. But deep down, we were afraid to hear about another disaster and that our country would no longer be part of the eurozone," Grapsa said.

Pro-Palestinian tourist ship protests irk Greek govt
Pro-Palestinian tourist ship protests irk Greek govt

France 24

time3 days ago

  • France 24

Pro-Palestinian tourist ship protests irk Greek govt

At the crack of dawn on Thursday at the port of Piraeus outside Athens, dozens of riot police armed with truncheons, tear gas and shields sealed up a cruise terminal from hundreds of demonstrators. Their ire was directed at the "Crown Iris", a hulking Israeli tourist ship that has attracted protests at each of its stops in the country since last month. Tourism is a pillar of the Greek economy, but pro-Palestinian activists say the visitors "whitewash" Israel's devastating war in Gaza that was sparked by the unprecedented 2023 Hamas attack. According to the All Workers Militant Front (PAME), a communist-affiliated union that called the rally, the Crown Iris was carrying Israeli soldiers. "We cannot tolerate people who have contributed to the genocide of the Palestinian people moving amongst us," protester Yorgos Michailidis told AFP in Piraeus. "We want people everywhere to see that we don't only care about tourism and the money they bring," the 43-year-old teacher said. For Katerina Patrikiou, a 48-year-old hospital worker, the visitors "are not tourists -- they are the slaughterers of children and civilians in Gaza". 'Useful idiots' Greece traditionally maintained a pro-Arab foreign policy, but governments of different political stripes have in recent years woven closer ties with Israel in defence, security and energy. Athens has carefully tried to protect both relations during the war, accusing the left-wing opposition of undermining the strategic Israel alliance aimed at counterbalancing the influence of historic rival Turkey in the eastern Mediterranean. "The useful idiots for Turkey have been in our ports, where their extreme actions seriously damage Greece's image in Israel," Health Minister Adonis Georgiadis wrote on X last month. "We must protect this alliance as the apple of our eye and isolate these fools... Those who exhibit antisemitic behaviour act against Greece's interests." Before joining the ruling conservative party in 2012, Georgiadis was a prominent member of far-right party Laos, which had a history of anti-Semitic statements. When first named health minister a year later, the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) had urged the government to reconsider, noting that Georgiadis had made "troubling remarks" about Jewish people and had promoted an anti-Semitic book. In 2017, he publicly apologised for having "coexisted with and tolerated the opinions of people who showed disrespect to my Jewish compatriots". Several protests each rallying hundreds of people attempted to prevent the Crown Iris from docking at Mediterranean islands including Rhodes, Crete and Syros last month, with occasional scuffles between demonstrators and police. According to The Times of Israel, the ship's owners decided to skip Syros after 200 people protested as the vessel approached. Israel's ambassador to Greece, Noam Katz, condemned an "attempt to harm the strong relations between our peoples, and to intimidate Israeli tourists" in Syros. Greece's Minister of Citizen Protection Michalis Chrisochoidis has said that anyone who "prevents a citizen of a third country from visiting our country will be prosecuted" for racism. 'Whitewash crimes' PAME accused the government of Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis of using antisemitism allegations "to whitewash the crimes of the murderer state, suppress any reaction, and any expression of solidarity with the Palestinian people". "Nobody is racist, nobody has a problem with Jewish identity... Our problem is the people who support genocide," Michailidis said at Thursday's rally. The October 7, 2023 attack on Israel by Gaza's Hamas rulers resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally of official figures. Palestinian militants also took 251 hostages that day, with 49 still held in Gaza, including 27 who the Israeli army says are dead. Israel's retaliatory offensive has killed more than 61,000 Palestinians, mainly civilians, according to figures from Gaza's Hamas-run health ministry which the United Nations considers reliable. An Israeli aid blockade has exacerbated already dire humanitarian conditions in the devastated strip and plunged its more than two million inhabitants into the risk of famine.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store