ON
← Back to feed
TRHealthOverlooked from the right6 days ago

Prosfygika hunger strikers continue 'strike to death'

Two residents of the Prosfygika squat in Athens, Greece, have been on hunger strikes for 135 and 50 days respectively, protesting against the Attica Region government's planned eviction. They claim the government's stated intention to renovate the building and convert it into social housing is a pretext to sell the property to private interests. The Prosfygika complex, designated as a historic monument since 2003 and 2008, has been occupied by over 400 people since 2012.

Two members of “the squatted community of Prosfygika ” in Athens, Greece, have entered their 135th and 50th day of what they are calling a “hunger strike until death."

Aristotelis Chantzis, who began his strike on February 5, 2026, is at serious risk of irreversible damage to vital organs and even death, and Suzon Doppagne, who began her hunger strike on May 1, 2026, has suffered from daily hypoglycemia episodes along with severe muscular pain, weakness and fatigue. Both hunger strikers hope that their efforts can save Europe’s largest residential squat from the Attica Region government’s eviction plans.

Attica claims it wants to renovate the building and turn it into social housing, but residents believe this is merely an excuse to sell the building to commercial capital and end an effort that presents an alternative to capitalistic housing models.

Chantzis and Doppagne are two of over 400 residents spread across the eight historic buildings that make up Prosfygika, which was declared a preserved historic monument in 2003 and 2008. These residents came together as a squatted community in 2012 and have taken it upon themselves to maintain the site, which they say would have been left to decay.

Historical legacy

The building was initially built in the 1930s to house refugees from Asia minor following the Greco-Turkish War and subsequent population exchange. Originally located on the outskirts of the city, the complex would go on to become a stronghold for left-wing militants during the Greek Civil War and as the city expanded would find itself in the center of Athens years later.

Prosfygika residents consider themselves the latest in the building’s left-wing legacy. For them, Prosfygika is a living monument of resistance, with an emphasis on living, rather than simply a historical landmark.

It is also one of few options available for some vulnerable residents, who worry that the state’s plans could leave them on the streets. The residents are disproportionately migrants, refugees, LGBTI+ and leftist political exiles. Many of whom are Turkish and Kurdish, but range from 27 different nationalities total.

For the state, Prosfygika is an eyesore on valuable real estate. Activists said the region government has repeatedly tried to sell the land to commercial capital, with the first efforts in the 1990s being to build a mall and parking lot. These previous efforts are part of why many residents remain unconvinced of both the state’s intentions and the proposal itself.

One of these residents, who goes by Apo and chose not to give his full name for security purposes, is a political exile from Turkey who faced several charges over revolutionary, communist activity. He arrived in Prosfygika in 2015 with the intention of learning about the political philosophy of democratic confederalism underpinning the squatted community. He described his experience as an ongoing learning process, for both himself and the community.

“As we were trying to build this process, we ourselves went through a learning process,” said Apo. “At the same time, we tried to connect what we were learning with our previous experiences — whether in Turkey or within the political structures we had been involved in … From our perspective, I think this has been a positive development.”

Evangelia, another long-term resident who chose not to give her full name, originally met and began volunteering with the community in 2019 and started living there in 2023.

“The houses here are also infrastructure of the community, shared sometimes with roommates so there is a collective program going on, which is the priority of everybody to cover according to the needs and [their] capabilities at the specific moment,” Evangelia said.

“[There are] a lot of meetings during the day, a lot of discussions to solve the problems that exist because problems arise and they exist in daily life because it's a human situation, but the difference here is that there is the commitment to solve those issues and to transform [the situation],” she added.

According to Evangelia, police have targeted the residents through raids, police brutality, arbitrary arrests and more, in an attempt to force residents off of the property.

“From a political and sociological perspective, they see this place as a threat to their system, to their way of thinking,” said Apo. “They are disturbed by an autonomous, libertarian, self-sufficient system that they cannot control, perhaps even more than by [lost] economic gain.

Alternative housing models

The proposed state-run social housing program would still remain incompatible with the vision of the squatted community because their structures function independent of the state. Residents work on the outside but have built lives on the inside that extend far beyond a place to sleep.

Residents hold community meetings, share household duties and operate structures to meet basic needs and provide enrichment. This includes a ba…

Read the full article at Bianet
Source document: Prosfygika squat residents

1 reports

BianetIndependentLeft6 days ago
Prosfygika hunger strikers continue 'strike to death'

Two residents of the Prosfygika squat in Athens, Greece, have been on hunger strikes for 135 and 50 days respectively, protesting against the Attica Region government's planned eviction. They claim the government's stated intention to renovate the building and convert it into social housing is a pretext to sell the property to private interests. The Prosfygika complex, designated as a historic monument since 2003 and 2008, has been occupied by over 400 people since 2012.

Bias read (Left): The article frames the eviction as an attack on an alternative to capitalist housing models and highlights the residents' struggle against perceived privatization. It emphasizes the historical significance of the site and portrays the government's actions as motivated by profit rather than public的好处

Official sources cited

  • study Prosfygika squat residents

Go to the primary sources (1)

The official sources this coverage is built on. Read them directly to bypass framing.

  • studyProsfygika squat residents