Greece to use drones to stop crowds gathering for Orthodox Easter

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Government also plans to contain spread of Covid-19 by banning weekend travel

Greek Orthodox priests conduct an Easter service on Friday in a church behind closed doors in Athens.
Greek Orthodox priests conduct an Easter service on Friday in a church behind closed doors in Athens. Photograph: Alkis Konstantinidis/Reuters

Greek authorities will deploy drones, monitor churches and ramp up street patrols as they prepare the nation for a very different Orthodox Easter in the age of Covid-19.

The spectre of worshippers defying strict bans on movement to mark the most sacred holiday of the year has posed an unprecedented challenge for officials.

“This Easter is different. We will not go to our villages. We will not roast in our yards. We will not go to our churches. And, of course, we will not gather in the homes of relatives and friends,” the government spokesman Stelios Petsas said. “For us to continue being together, this year we stay apart.”

Greece: coronavirus deaths per day

In a country that has so far managed to contain the pandemic, the long weekend is seen as crucial if the chain of transmissions is to be successfully stopped.

To date, 105 people have died of the virus in a population of 11 million, where confirmed cases and the number of critically ill, at 2,207 and 69 respectively, are also lower than any other European state.

Greece was shown to be the continent’s best-performing country in both flattening the curve and slowing down the spread of the virus in a study released this week by the international Bridge Tank thinktank.

But government ministers, like officials in other Orthodox countries, also realise they have a fight on their hands.

Traditionally, Greeks flock to ancestral homes in the countryside, filing into churches and chapels in raucous celebration of the most significant religious event in the Orthodox calendar, one that never passes without firecrackers, spit-roasted lamb, music and dancing.

Although a nation better known for its distain for authority has elected to defer to dictates announced in response to the epidemic, there are signs people may have reached a psychological cut-off point.

Rogue clerics and unrulier Greeks have vowed to mark Easter in spirited fashion – even if, thanks to social distancing, Good Friday processions, church services and family gatherings are forbidden.

Last week, signalling revolt, Bishop Nektarios of Corfu openly flouted the restrictions by conducting a service, including the taking of holy communion from a shared chalice, attended by a local mayor and senior municipal councillor on the Ionian island. When a public prosecutor subsequently ordered he be put on trial after pressing charges, his lawyer retorted “there is no decree prohibiting holy communion”. Clerics, like the bishop, faced a “huge moral dilemma” over what to do, he said.

Nikos Hardalias, the civil protection minister handling the day-to-day response to the pandemic, warned on Thursday that miscreants should not expect leniency. At €300 per infraction, he said the penalties would be doubled if Greeks were found to be indulging in “purposeless movement” over the long weekend. Restrictions will be tightened from Saturday evening through to midnight on Monday, with an estimated 5,000 extra police dispatched to patrol the streets of the Greater Athens region of Attica alone.