UPITN 12 11 74 GREEK RESISTANCE LEADER PANAGOULIS HOLDS PRESS CONFERENCE

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  • Опубликовано: 13 сен 2024
  • (12 Nov 1974) Alekos Panagoulis, a leader of the Greek resistance against the Junta, holds a press conference in Athens.
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Комментарии • 9

  • @estrellamarrone
    @estrellamarrone 6 лет назад +1

    Thank you from my heart for this video. Thank you.

  • @elahis4608
    @elahis4608 3 года назад +2

    Panagoulis, I zoí! I zoí! 2021.

  • @irontribeissues9104
    @irontribeissues9104 3 года назад +1

    No sound.

  • @Shaghayegh.Ansari
    @Shaghayegh.Ansari 3 года назад

    From iran, panagoulis🖤🖤

  • @mariaaris6932
    @mariaaris6932 6 лет назад

    Please can Someone translate in eng.?

    • @Crete1943
      @Crete1943 5 лет назад +3

      Alekos Panagoulis was a commissioned officer of the Greek Army Contingent in Cyprus in the '60s, who hatched a plan to assassinate the Greek Junta strongman George Papadopoulos, on August 13th, 1968, but failed and was captured. Here, after his release (following the Junta's collapse in 1974), he describes the conditions of his detention and names the guards who ignored standard procedure and risked being punished for showing him kindness, encouraging him to keep his morale during his imprisonment in the Military Prison of Bogiáti on the island of Aegina, near Athens, from where he managed to escape on the 5th of June, 1969. He was recaptured and was 'en-walled' or 'entombed alive' in a windowless cement cell measuring 2.0m by 1.20m, in which he remained for several years all day and night, unable to walk more than just three steps forward and three steps backwards. The cell was especially constructed for his sole detention, in order to prevent him from escaping again and in complete isolation from other prisoners, in that same year 1969. Panagoúlis was repeatedly beaten and tortured in that same cell savagely. It is in that cell that he often staged hunger strikes in protest because even the Red Cross was denied access. The purpose of this interview was to request that this particular cell be photographed by the new Greek administration and remain documented for posterity as a symbol of fight against tyranny.

    • @trucktrucker5043
      @trucktrucker5043 5 лет назад +3

      @@Crete1943 Alekos Panagoulis was not an officer.He was soldier serving his military duty at that time,who deserted and escped to Cyprus.He had a big brother who was a special forces officer and who also deserted.Panagoulis was financed and aided by cypriot minister Polykarpos Giorkatzis to assasinate G.Papadopoulos.He even received the explosives in diplomatic bags from the Cyprus embassy in Athens.

    • @axelfolie1654
      @axelfolie1654 2 года назад

      Please can someone translate in Zulu language ????