Less than an hour into landing in
Athens, I was
robbed off my passport and many hundred euros in broad daylight inside a crowded metro. I have been traveling
alone for many years now. I have traveled close to 25 countries so far, and many of them on my
own. I usually stay at hostels and fit in easily with an international crowd. I
am not shy or awkward and stay extra alert while traveling. I can read maps and
I can navigate my way around even in obscure little towns where I do not speak
the local language. I usually show up at airports an hour extra ahead of time. I
usually get two printouts of documents kept in separate places. I stick to the
crowded parts of a city, do not venture out at night, and never go for a drink
with people I have just met at hostels. In short, I do all that I can to stay
safe and not get drugged or killed while traveling, and in general. Then how
did this happen to me? It's a useful (and very expensive) experience to share.
After landing in Athens, I bought a € 10 one-way ticket from the
airport to Omonia. This required me to take the blue line
from the airport to Syntagma, and then change to the red line for two more
stops to Omonia. I had a trolley suitcase on my left and a small handbag on my
right. I got down at
Syntagma to change to the red line. When the train came, a group of men and
women got on the train from the same door as mine. They were a part of a big
gang. But this, I realized later. The moment I got on the red line metro, these
people kind of surrounded me and did not let me move.
"Omonia, how many
stops? Next stop?" one of them asked me naively. They were all standing
too close for comfort.
"Two" I said and tried to move away. The
crowd would not let me. Have you ever played kabaddi? You will know what I
mean. They closed in on me. A man on my left held my left hand rather
amorously. I jerked away my hand. He looked at me and smiled, asking to hold my
trolley suitcase which was in my left hand. I immediately knew that something
bad is going to happen to me. Intuitively, yes. I turned to the man on the left
to grab my suitcase. He just would not release my hand. He squeezed it just
like a lover would do. That was when someone on the right took a bag that was
inside another bigger bag and had my passport and all my money. All this
happened in less than 60 seconds. They got off at Panepistimio, the station
before Omonia, and walked out in a group. By then, I knew that I had lost
something, and something big. I just did not know (yet) what it was.
When I got
off at Omonia, I was relieved to see that my purse was with me. But the relief
lasted for a second. Because my passport bag next to it was gone.
So here are a
few things you need to know. This, I can tell from my experience and talking to
the police as well as the embassy:
1. These guys operate in huge gangs,
specifically inside the airport (yes!!) and in the metro stations. Women are
also a part of these gangs. I was told they are refugees, but I do not know about that.
2. They pretend that they do
not know each other, but they do. When they target someone, they just close in
on them.
3. They use a distraction technique, holding your hand amorously or
smiling flirtatiously, slightly pushing a heavier luggage from your hand. But remember, they have no intention to flirt or take your suitcase. This is meant
to distract you in one direction while someone is working in the other
direction. And they work really really fast, within a minute or so. They just
get off at the next station and walk out.
4. Distribute your money. I was going to once I checked in to my hostel, but it
was too late.
If you are a victim of a stolen passport, do the following:
1.
Immediately go to the police station for tourists. I first went to the metro
police, who asked me to go to another police station, and I had to go to three
police stations until I found the right one.
2. Cabs in Athens are super cheap.
If you still have some money, just take a cab.
3. The police does not care.
They see cases like this everyday. I was told that sometimes they are involved
too, but I do not know about that. However, you need to take the police report
to the Indian embassy (or the embassy of your country) as soon as possible.
That report was written entirely in Greek. At the embassy, someone will
translate it and issue a "temporary passport" that will let you fly
back to the country of your residence. It is a hand-written passport and mine was valid for one year. The
police report is the first step. The embassy cannot do anything without that.
4. The Indian Embassy in Athens is super nice and helpful. When I explained
what happened, they said they will try to get me a temporary passport within
the next day. It's just like applying for a normal passport. The embassy charged me € 126 for a
temporary passport, and issued it to me within two hours. They
are super nice people.
5. Take your temporary passport and get back to your country of residence.
From there, apply for a fresh passport.
6. ALWAYS travel with
a photocopy of your passport and a few passport sized pictures. This, I did not
do. The embassy needs to get all the information from your passport, which is
why you need to carry photocopies.
7. Get in touch with the embassy of your
country as soon as possible. They are the only ones who can and will help you.
8. No matter how
much shock you are in, don't forget to eat and drink water. An empty stomach
and dehydrated body will do strange things to your brain. You need to be alert
and make judgments very quickly. I am pretty sure I hallucinated the entire
night.
So how does it feel? To say that I am shaken and shattered would be an
understatement. I was too afraid to go to an ATM and take out money at night, and
had to wait till the next morning to find some of my confidence back. My legs
had no strength to move. I have never felt more helpless in a foreign country
where I knew no one and was not even carrying a cell phone. I would not wish
this on anyone. But I am glad that I was physically not hurt (I was told that
some of them carry razors and pocket knives too). The thing is, it's not that I
suddenly realized that my stuff is gone. I knew all the time that something bad
is happening to me. But they put you into a trance. They distract you. As a
woman, I would watch out for someone who is holding my hand. At one point, I
feared that I might be mauled or molested. But that is a distraction technique.
All this will be over in less than a minute. And a woman traveling alone with
luggage makes a great target.
I have many things to be sad about, but many
things to be thankful about too.
My passport is gone, but is replaceable.
Thank God my US visa was not in this passport.
They stole all the cash, but my bank cards,
and most importantly, my residence permit was in a different bag and were not stolen. Without my residence permit, I could not have reentered Germany. Although I was within the Schengen
area, airlines and airports are super strict these days after the
Paris/Brussels attacks. You need to carry your
passport at all times.
I wish the money went to someone needy. It is a lot,
but I will earn it back eventually. Passport, I will have a new one. But what I
really lost that day was my self-confidence. I felt violated. I felt like
someone had crushed my confidence and reduced me to nothing. I had no strength
to walk on a street without cowering and feeling like I will be attacked again.
It made me feel small. It made me blame myself for the hundreds of things I
could have done differently. But as long as you are alive, everything is
replaceable. I saw Athens after that, and traveled some more with my temporary passport. 6-7 men robbed me in broad daylight.
But 60 people jumped in to help me. I am grateful to all of them. And a big thank you to the people of
the Indian Embassy. You went out of your way to do much more than getting me a
passport promptly. You made me feel safe and understood.
And lastly, a little
bit of something that perked me up. Miss Universe 1994 Sushmita Sen had the same experience at the Athens airport in 2012. I am very sorry for your loss
Sushmita, but this might be the closest I have come to saying "same
pinch" to a Bollywood celebrity I like.
sunshine
6 comments:
oh my God. how terrible. I feel terrified just reading this.
Sorry to hear about the incident. Hope you are back to your usual self.
very sorry to hear. hope you get your papers sorted out soon and thanks for sharing the experience
Oh man, that really really sucks. I am so sorry for your ordeal. But look at this way - you were in a strange country on your own and you were robbed..yet you managed. You managed to figure out what to do, went to different places withut knowing anybody or the language, and you got things sorted out all on your own. You still managed to travel and lived to tell the tale. You should be very very proud of yourself. As you said, money and passport is not irreplacable...you will eventually get over the shock. There are shitty people everywhere, its not specific to any country. My dad lost close to 80 thousand rupees in a bmtc bus in bangalore in broad daylight...and you know what the most horrid part was? His elder brother (my uncle) had passed away the previous day and the money was meant to help with his funeral expenses:(:(:( I will never forget the sadness and heartbreak on my dad's face that day. If there is anything like karma i hope all these guys get their comeuppance.
>But what I really lost that day was my self-confidence
A bunch of people went into this planning things in advance and having done this many times and you weren't there exactly anticipating this kind of thing. This can happen to the best of us. No reason to lose confidence over such things..
Terrible ! Take care !
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