Yahoo – AFP,
8 July 2015
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Giorgos
Chatzifotiadis sits crying outside a branch of the national bank in
Thessaloniki after failing to withdraw the pension of 120 euros for his wife,
July 3, 2015 (AFP Photo/Sakis Mitrolidis)
|
Sydney
(AFP) - An Australian touched by an image of a pensioner sobbing outside a
Greek bank said Wednesday he was flying over to Europe to support the man
financially after discovering he was a family friend.
Giorgos
Chatzifotiadis, 77, broke down in Greece's second city of Thessaloniki last
week and cried in despair after he failed at four different financial
institutions to withdraw a pension of 120 euros (US$132) on behalf of his wife.
The picture
of him sitting on the ground was captured by an AFP photographer and went
around the world, starkly illustrating how ordinary Greeks are suffering during
the country's debt crisis.
James
Koufos, an Australian-born chief executive of a finance firm, saw the photo
published in Sydney and thought the retiree looked "so much like a friend
of my dad's".
The
41-year-old said he was talking to his mother, who lives in Greece, on Facebook
and she confirmed Chatzifotiadis was an old friend of his late father, who died
18 months ago.
"When
I saw this, I said to mum, 'What can we do?'," Koufos told AFP.
"I got
my mother to take out some cash, to find the man and give him some immediate
support."
Koufos also
put out an emotional appeal on Facebook to locate Chatzifotiadis, and has since
set up a trust fund welcoming further contributions. He is set to depart Sydney
on Saturday for Athens, before heading to Thessaloniki to meet the pensioner.
"We're
going over there to surprise him and just give him quite a substantial amount
of money, plus we're also raising some money now from corporations... who want
to donate," said the businessman.
They aim to
offer help to others besides Chatzifotiadis wherever they can, he said.
"We're
dealing with a few places that deal with shelters in Athens and Thessaloniki to
offer immediate support where we can with shelter and food."
Koufos'
family is also from Thessaloniki, and Chatzifotiadis even attended his sister's
wedding.
Australia
is home to a large number of Greek migrants, with the city of Melbourne having
the third-largest Greek-speaking population of any city in the world outside
Athens and Thessaloniki, according to Australian government statistics.
Koufos,
whose parents hail from Greece, said he became emotional after viewing the
photographs as they "told a thousand stories".
"Those
photos had such an impact, not just on me, but a lot of people I know," he
said.
"I've
had grown men that I know in front of me and over the phone bawling their eyes
out on just how much it hit them."
European
leaders have given Athens a final deadline of Sunday to reach a new bailout
deal and avoid crashing out of the euro.
Greek
voters rejected international creditors' plans in a referendum over the
weekend.
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