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COVID-19: Greeks who do not send children to school face jail

Athens cracks down on parents who refuse to send their children to school because of COVID-19 measures such as mask-wearing or testing.

High school students queue to check COVID-19 self-test results with a teacher while entering their school in an Athens suburb on April 12, 2021 [File: Louisa Gouliamaki/AFP]


Athens, Greece – Parents who do not send their children to school because of COVID-19 measures will face a two-year prison sentence and a fine, the Greek government has said – the latest move by Athens which appears to target people who deny critical features of the pandemic, such as vaccination, mask-wearing or testing.


School attendance until the age of 16 has long been compulsory in Greece, but until now, the penalty for non-enrollment was 59 euros ($67).


“We could not tolerate the phenomenon of parents keeping children from school,” Alexandros Koptsis, general secretary for primary and secondary education at the education ministry, told Al Jazeera.


“This happens for inconceivable reasons, like not wanting your child to wear a mask.”


The ministry legislated an amendment to the penal code on Tuesday.


“If a prosecutor deems it necessary, parents could even be deprived of custody,” Koptsis recently told a local radio station.


He told Al Jazeera this was based on standing law and was “entirely up to prosecutors”.

The ministry will not pursue parents directly, but is providing headteachers with legal tools.


“We are showing schools a general [policy] direction, and it will then be up to principals to call prosecutors,” Koptsis said.



Students chat as they arrive in their high school in an Athens suburb on April 12, 2021 [File: Louisa Gouliamaki/AFP]


Parents convicted with two-year imprisonment will not necessarily be severed from their children, because sentences of up to five years can be bought out at rates set by the courts, based on convicts’ income.


Reported cases of parents refusing to enrol their children are currently few, and the education ministry has not announced them. But ministry sources say they are in the dozens.

Affected children will have to repeat a year.


“If there is no excuse for an absence – in elementary school, it’s six months, in middle school 114 hours – then unfortunately the child is remaindered.”


The problem started in the last academic year.


Students attended school in person in September 2020, but a lockdown was ordered from October to May 2021, during which students attended school virtually.


Students were allowed to return to school for the last six weeks of the academic year wearing masks and doing two self-tests a week.


Prodromos Fotakidis, a high school teacher in Drama, told Skai television that three of his students did not show up for the end of the last academic year.


“I was with one of the parents on campus,” he said. “He was one of those parents who dispute everything, saying self-tests are dangerous and offer no protection.”


Greece has ordained that if half the students in a class plus one are sick with COVID-19, the class adjourns for 10 days.


The ministry says two out of 10,000 classes are currently adjourned, and one in every 1,000 students is diagnosed with COVID-19.


“We consider these figures very good. They work out to one sickness a day,” said Koptsis.


Greece, which has fully vaccinated 62 percent of the total population, has been trying to close a vaccination gap with the rest of Europe, which has vaccinated 66 percent.


The education ministry says half of the students aged 14 and above are now vaccinated with at least a first dose. Vaccinations for preschoolers and elementary students aged four to 11 begin on Friday.



A high school student sits inside a classroom at Glyfada, a suburb west of Athens, April 12, 2021 [File: Yorgos Karahalis/AP Photo]

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