After fatal Greek train crash, a campus simmers with rage
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[April 04, 2023]
By Karolina Tagaris
THESSALONIKI, Greece (Reuters) - A month after 12 students at Greece's
largest university were killed in a train crash, messages of grief
across the campus are tinged with rage.
"This crime will not be forgotten," a note on a makeshift memorial at
the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki reads.
Fifty-seven people died in the country's deadliest rail disaster on Feb.
28, when a passenger train and a cargo train travelling on the same
track collided head-on.
Many of the victims were students returning from a long carnival weekend
and in the days after the crash, grief over their loss spilled into
angry street protests at safety failings at the country's ailing
railways, which authorities have acknowledged.
"This intense sadness turned into rage," said Konstantina Ksini, 22, an
engineering student whose friend Agapi Tsaklidou was killed and who was
shocked after seeing another funeral notice at the university's
entrance.
"It's gut-wrenching. A funeral notice for a kid we knew... This broke
me," she said. "It infuriates us that this could have not happened."
The crash stirred anger against consecutive governments and a political
system that has repeatedly ignored calls by railway unions to improve
safety and hire more staff. The government has promised a transparent
and thorough investigation.
"It is a shame for Greece, a European country in 2023, to have railways
which are not safe," said Lysimachos Papazoglou, a professor of
veterinary surgery, whose 22-year-old physics student son Giorgos died.
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A man stands next to flowers and
messages for the victims of a fatal train crash, at the closed train
station of Thessaloniki, Greece, March 24, 2023. REUTERS/Alexandros
Avramidis
Moments before the crash, Giorgos entered a cafe in a carriage that
was obliterated.
"It's as if there was a crack in the future, telling you the future
no longer exists," Papazoglou said, his gaze fixed on a photograph
showing his two sons smiling alongside their mother in a swimming
pool. "The kids were the future, not us."
A makeshift memorial lists the names of those killed alongside their
departments. Twenty-six students were injured.
"We paid a heavy price in blood in this tragedy," Rector Nikos
Papaioannou said.
In the university cafes, corridors and classrooms, discussion has
shifted to what can be done.
"This sadness, this anger, we tried - as students - to turn it into
a fight," said Evangelia Grigoriou, a civil engineering student.
In a nearby classroom, a black-and-white drawing shows a derailed
carriage with the word "murderers" in red. Elsewhere, a hand-drawn
poster on window shows two trains crashing.
"We'll be quiet when the kids are sleeping," it reads. "Not when
they're killing them."
(Additional reporting by Alexandros Avramidis; Editing by Conor
Humphries)
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