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The following is a true
story:
This is the true story of what happened to me during my
vacation in Greece, and I wish to share it with anyone planning
to take a trip out that way. It is very important that you know
about the incidents that have befallen tourists, myself included.
I am a 22 year old student from the Czech republic. I wish I
could give you my name, because I realize that withholding my
name hurts the credibility of this online story, but the company
I work for does a lot of business with Greece and has asked me
not to identify myself specifically.
This summer, 1999, I stayed on the island of Crete in the city
of Hersonissos for one month. My 19 year old cousin, who was
present during the incident in question, joined me in the last
two weeks of this stay. On the 21st of September, we rented a car
and drove to Sissi (a small village, 15 km from Hersonissos). It
was about 09:00 when I accidentally rear-ended another driver,
only about 1 km outside of the city. No one was hurt. A police
man at the side of the road doing speed checks (radar), saw the
accident and took charge of the case.
We can not tell you the police officer's name, but we were later told
that he was known to most people as "Rambo" for his
history of brutality and his attitude. When we stepped out of the
car, he approached us and began yelling at me in English, asking
if I was crazy and saying that he thought I was a danger to kids
on the street (even though we were on the highway outside the
city). I didn't answer him because I didn't really know what to
say (and I was still quite shocked that I had caused a car
accident).
He asked me where I was from, and I didn't understand him the
first time because he had a thick accent. Then he asked me again,
even angrier because (I think) he thought I didn't want to tell
him. I think he thought my cousin and I were illegal workers,
which I'm told is a big problem in Greece. By this point he was
close enough to grab me, and as I was telling him that I am from
Czech he turned me around and threw me hard against the car like
you see in exaggerated American movies. He twisted my arms way up
behind my back and handcuffed me. Honestly, I was behaving
calmly, so there was just no logical reason for his violent
anger.
As he was handcuffing me, he was still yelling and he said
that he thought I was drunk and that was why I was driving
quickly and dangerously. Obviously, I was driving too fast but I
didn't expect the car in front of me to stop so suddenly when he
saw the radar speed trap. I don't know why he was getting so
angry, because I was completely powerless at this point, but I
thought that he was going to hit me right there on the street. A
police car drove up at that point, probably on routine patrol
because I didn't see Rambo call anyone, and I was thrown into
the back and taken to the police station back in Hersonissos.
This left my young cousin (who speaks even less Greek than I do)
alone on the highway with a broken rental car, and she had to
hitch hike back to the city, go to my apartment to find my
passport, and then find the police station. She thinks that this
took about 1 hour.
During this time, the police car I was being transported in
arrived at the station and I was taken to the police Chief's
office. This man acted very kind and sympathetic at first, and I
felt very relieved after dealing with Rambo. Because I don't
speak Greek very well, which is the only language the Chief
spoke, we communicated in English through Rambo. They had me
fill out some paperwork and sign Greek documents even though I
couldn't read what they said. Twice, while I was doing this, the
Chief kicked me hard in the back, near my kidneys. I can't think
of any reason why he should do this. They kept telling me that I
was drunk, even though I told them I hadn't had anything to drink
since the night before. I know that I had not had too much to drink, and they did not give me any tests to check.
When my cousin arrived, she brought my passport to the Chief's
office, but was not allowed to come in or even to see me. She was
told to wait in the lobby, where Rambo came out and asked her
questions about my drinking and told her she should be scared of
him and tell the truth. He was a very big man, and he acted
aggressively towards her, even though she told him the truth,
just like I did. I was brought out to see her a few minutes
later. I had been released from the handcuffs to fill out the
paperwork, but then they put them back on me (behind my back) and
I had to ask a different officer in the lobby to put them on in
front of me instead. I was told to empty my pockets (still
wearing the handcuffs) and then they sat me down on the opposite
side of the lobby from my cousin and left us there for 25
minutes.
Rambo told me to follow him down to the basement (where
there were a couple of unlit cells, 2 meters by 2 meters,
containing only an old mattress filthy with blood and vomit) and
he closed the door behind us so that my cousin was left alone
again in the lobby. He made me take off my shoes and glasses,
then he hit me several times in the stomach and in the back, near
my kidneys. He also took my head in his hands and bashed my face
against the bars of the cell a few times. My cousin tells me that
she could hear Rambo yelling at me about being drunk and she
could hear me screaming in pain, but there was nothing she could
do. This only took a few minutes, then he left me in the dark and
went upstairs to tell my cousin I had to be taken to the capitol
city hospital for blood alcohol tests, and that she should come
back in about 3 hours. She believed him, and went back to my
apartment.
They never took me to any hospital or performed any tests on
me. For three hours I was alone in the dark, except when Rambo
would come down for a few minutes to hit me some more. I demanded
the right to call my embassy, but he just yelled in my face that
he was a Greek police man and I was in Greece so he was the boss.
In the cell next to me, an Albanian told me that he had been
locked up for days, and he had not committed any crimes (I did
not ask if he entered the country illegally - Greece considers
it's number of Albanian refugees a real problem). I had no idea
how long I was going to be left here in the small dark cell, in
pain and knowing that I was going to be beaten again, and
eventually I lost hope and wished that I was dead. After a while,
I remember how pathetically happy I was every time the upstairs
door opened because I wanted so badly to see light again. It
didn't even matter that I was going to be beaten some more.
Eventually, I was brought upstairs again and I was told to
sign some more Greek papers. Rambo told me to get out, but
that he was going to keep my passport and driver's license until
I paid some office in town 75,000 Greek Drachmas (approximately
$200 in American dollars or £160 in British pounds) returned
with a receipt. My apartment was about 10 minutes away, and I
arrived back just as my cousin was leaving so I must have been in
that basement for more than 2.5 hours. That may not seem like
much time, but please imagine what a hell it was, and I had no
concept of time after a while.
When I got into the apartment I was sicker than I have ever
felt before, and I was vomiting blood. My head ached so much
from being bashed against the bars, my left wrist was
sprained and painful, I had bruises on my arms and back, and cuts on my wrists from the very tight handcuffs.
We wanted to get documentation of my injuries from a doctor,
but we could not find a non-Greek doctor and Greek doctors would
not get involved in police affairs so I had to pretend that my
injuries were a result of the car accident. I was diagnosed with
a concussion, a sprained wrist, and a case of shock (the reason
for my vomiting blood).
I had not understood where I was supposed to go to pay the fee
for my passport and driver's license, but luckily a taxi driver
knew where to take us (for a price). I paid the 75,000 Drachmas
and got the receipt I needed, but it took me several days to work
up the nerve to face those police men again (and my cousin was
too scared to go alone). When we did go, Rambo was there
off-duty and he told us to get out as soon as the policeman
on-duty returned my passport and driver's license.
The Greek Island of Crete is a beautiful place, and most
citizens are friendly, but before you decide to go, please be
aware of the injustice that can occur there. The police are
always looking for Albanians that are in their country illegally,
but they can be unfairly rough on other foreigners.
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