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Huge protests, strikes paralyse Greece on train crash anniversary

Anger against the government has grown, with opinion polls showing that most Greeks believe officials covered up evidence after the crash

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Protesters mark the second anniversary of the country’s worst railway disaster, while an investigation continues, in Thessaloniki, Greece on February 28, 2025. Photo: Reuters

Tens of thousands of people gathered in Athens and other Greek cities to mark the second anniversary of the country’s worst rail tragedy as strikes caused a general standstill.

Fifty-seven people, mostly students, died on February 28, 2023 when a train from Athens to Thessaloniki carrying more than 350 passengers collided with a goods train near the central city of Larissa.

Over 50,000 people turned out to protest at Athens’s central Syntagma Square, police said, with an equivalent number in Thessaloniki.

Many walked several kilometres to join the protest as subway trains heading downtown were already jammed with passengers.

“Today we must send a strong message to punish those responsible for this tragedy,” Nikos Lykomitros, a 20-year-old archaeology student, told Agence France-Presse in Athens.

A drone view of people in front of the Greek parliament during a protest in Athens, Greece, on February 28, 2025. Photo: Reuters
A drone view of people in front of the Greek parliament during a protest in Athens, Greece, on February 28, 2025. Photo: Reuters

For Babis Solakidis, a 44-year-old metalsmith, “This was not a simple accident, and there will be more if safety measures are not taken.”

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