Submitted by Oldroser on Wed, 06/20/2012 - 17:48.
  
  All indications suggest that basic services in Greece have begun to  break down, with reports from several Greek prisons and military  installations indicating that prisoners are malnourished and starving.  Food shortages caused by austerity related spending cuts and truck  stoppages are also reportedly reducing daily rations for soldiers  stationed in the area of Corinth, Greece.
We may very well be seeing the cracks in a society on the verge of complete meltdown.
At a time when the entire country is being tested by the  economic crisis, some people are quite literally on the verge of  destitution and hunger. At a time when the empty state coffers can not  support any concept of a welfare state, with “frozen” financing towards  education and health, the prison system could not be an exception.
The financing for many prisons has decreased to a minimum for some  months now, resulting in hundreds of detainees being malnourished and  surviving on the charity of local communities.
The latest example is the prison in Corinth where after the supply  stoppage from the nearby military camp, the prisoners are at the mercy  of God because, as reported by prison staff, not even one grain of rice  has been left in their warehouses. When a few days earlier the commander  of the camp announced to the prison management the transportation  stoppage, citing lack of food supplies even for the soldiers, he shut  down the last source of supply for 84 prisoners. The response of some  Corinth citizens was immediate as they took it upon themselves to  support the prisoners, since all protests to the Justice ministry were  fruitless.
The prisons in Patra and Alikarnassos have also been experiencing  food supply problems lately, as the prisoners who cannot afford to buy  food from the prison canteen are left without food.
Source: Proto Thema News
   
      
Society on the verge of breakdown...
All eyes on the Olympics this week--I wonder if cameras will show what's happening in Greece, too...