‘Real’ Greek farmers fume over EU subsidies scandal

Thessaloniki farmer Anna Aivazidi’s blood boils when she thinks of the huge sums siphoned off in a major EU farm subsidy scandal. (AFP)
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Updated 23 September 2025
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‘Real’ Greek farmers fume over EU subsidies scandal

  • Thessaloniki farmer Anna Aivazidi’s blood boils when she thinks of the huge sums siphoned off in a major EU farm subsidy scandal

THESSALONIKI:Thessaloniki farmer Anna Aivazidi’s blood boils when she thinks of the huge sums siphoned off in a major EU farm subsidy scandal.
“I earn 300 euros ($355) in subsidies a year. I struggle to produce every day. I feel extremely wronged,” the 40-year-old told AFP.
“Subsidies should go to real producers,” she said.
Aivazidi is among thousands of Greek farmers who say they were penalized for years while others profited, in a massive scam allegedly assisted by government officials.
The scheme began following a change in the European Union’s Common Agricultural Policy, which in 2014 shifted subsidies from livestock to land.
Greece’s land registry at the time was woefully incomplete, however, meaning ownership over much of the country was unclear.
To facilitate them, farmers were allowed to declare land owned elsewhere in Greece to claim a share of the subsidies. Non-farmers with political connections got in on the action, lured by the prospect of easy money.
“The fraud essentially involved the process of appropriating or declaring public pastures by individuals who were not genuinely active farmers and who didn’t own animals to use them,” said Moschos Korasidis, former vice president of OPEKEPE, the government agency that handled the EU payments.
Genuine farmers lost an estimated 70 million euros a year, he said.
“The scheme was well organized... it was a criminal organization which naturally required political cover,” said Giorgos Drosos, 65, a wheat and cotton grower in Thessaly.
Greek authorities estimate at least 23 million euros in EU farm subsidies went to fraudulent claimants. But the full cost could be even greater, according to the European public prosecutor’s office.
“Our subsidies were slashed by 70 percent while phantom (farmers) pocketed thousands of euros,” said Pavlos Spyropoulos, a 49-year-old cotton farmer from Trikala.
False declarations
An EU probe has shown widespread abuse of funds handed out by OPEKEPE, which, according to the government, annually disbursed more than three billion euros in subsidies to 680,000 farmers.
“Such illegal practice may have been organized in a systematic manner with the involvement of (OPEKEPE) officials,” the European public prosecutor’s office said in a statement in May.
The probe is primarily focusing on the period after 2019 under the conservative administration of Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis.
Mitsotakis has said that the fraud began in 2016, and has insisted that two agriculture ministers appointed by him, who are under investigation, bear no criminal responsibility.
“We have been clear on this — no criminal responsibilities arise,” the prime minister told Antenna TV recently.
One high-profile case is the conservative party’s former coordinator for EU funds, who resigned in August. She denies any wrongdoing.
In a further blow to Mitsotakis, the EU probe has found that most of the allegedly fraudulent claims came from the island of Crete, where his family has held political influence for over a century.
According to OPEKEPE, approximately 80 percent of total subsidies granted from 2017 to 2020 for pastures ended up in Crete.
While the number of livestock farmers across Greece is decreasing, in Crete, 13,000 new farmers were registered between 2019 and 2025, with the number of declared sheep and goats doubling over the same period.
Mitsotakis on Wednesday stressed that state auditors had seized 22 million euros from 1,000 spurious tax accounts.
“You can’t call that a small sum. And the checks go on,” he told Antenna.
He added that it was “obvious” that members of his New Democracy party would be involved in an “extensive corruption case” because “we are the biggest party.”
Mount Olympus bananas
Eye-catching cases under investigation are pastures declared in archaeological sites, olive trees in a military airport, and banana plantations on Mount Olympus.
“They set up a shop with European Union money. The politicians knew. It was a business,” said Nikos Kakavas, head of the federation of geotechnical civil servants.
“If the European Prosecutor’s Office hadn’t intervened, nothing would have happened. We’ve been shouting about this for years, but no one listened,” Kakavas said.
There was no absence of red flags, argued Athanassios Saropoulos, head of the Greek geotechnical chamber’s Macedonia branch.
In the Chania region, seat of the Mitsotakis family, in the first eight months of the year, nearly one million registered sheep and goats produced 12 times less milk than in the Larissa region, he said.
“This cannot be explained by any technical or scientific terms,” Saropoulos said.


Kremlin welcomes US sanctions waiver says US and Russia share interest in stable energy markets

Updated 6 sec ago
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Kremlin welcomes US sanctions waiver says US and Russia share interest in stable energy markets

DUBAI: Russia sees ​a U.S. sanctions waiver on its oil as ‌an ‌attempt ​by ‌Washington ⁠to stabilise ​global energy ⁠markets, and the two countries ⁠have a shared ‌interest ‌in ​this, ‌Kremlin ‌spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Friday.

"We see ‌actions by the United States aimed ‌at trying to stabilise energy markets. In this respect, our interests coincide," he said.

US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent announced a temporary authorisation allowing countries around the world to purchase Russian oil currently stranded at sea on Thursday extending a measure that had previously been granted only to Indian refiners.

Bessent stressed in a post on X that the authorisation would not provide significant financial benefit to the Russian government. 

“This narrowly tailored, short-term measure applies only to oil already in transit and will not provide significant financial benefit to the Russian government, which derives the majority of its energy revenue from taxes assessed at the point of extraction,” Bessent said on a post on X. 

However, the measure received mix reviews in European capitals, with many fearing it could help replenish Russia's assualt on Ukraine. 

"I am concerned that we are further filling Putin's war chest," German Economy Minister Katherina Reiche said in Berlin on Friday.

Reiche said that she saw both sides to the United States' decision to issue ‌a 30-day ‌waiver ​for ‌the purchase ⁠of ​Russian oil ⁠products, understanding the increasing ecnomic and political turnout from the oil crisis, particurlarly in South Korea and Japan. 

"It seems to me that domestic political pressure in the United ⁠States is very, ‌very ‌high," ​Reiche said.

German ​Chancellor Friedrich Merz was more direct, saying on Friday that it was ‌wrong to ‌ease ​sanctions against ‌Russia ⁠for ​whatever reason. The sentiment was echoed by Norway’s Prime Minister, who also said sanctions should not be eased. 

Oil prices held gains above $100 Friday and most equity markets dropped after Iran's leader called for the blocking of the crucial Strait of Hormuz and the opening up of new fronts in the war against the United States and Israel.

With the conflict heading towards its third week and showing no signs of ending, investors are growing increasingly worried about an extended crisis that could fan inflation and hammer the global economy.