Outside a bank: The pensioner's story behind the photos that went viral (see pics)

A pensioner who unwittingly became the poster child for the importance of the referendum says he may not even be able to afford to vote

Photos of pensioner Giorgos Chatzifotiadis literally collapsing in tears outside a bank in Thessaloniki on Friday after failing to withdraw a pension on behalf of his wife were so heart-wrenching that they immediately went viral on the international media. Unwittingly, he became a symbol of pensioners pain after the application of capital controls in Greece allowing only for 60-euro ATM withdrawals and 120-euro pension withdrawals in order to combat money fleeing from bank accounts as a result of people’s panicked reaction to the referendum announcement.

CRYING

The story of Chatzifotiadis is not unusual. In fact, even before capital controls were enforced, as a Greek pensioner he had been given the run-around as bureaucrats typically send the elderly on daily paper chases – just a daily fact when dealing with the Greek social security system. On the day the photo was taken, Chatzifotiadis had lined up at three banks at Thessaloniki, northern Greece, before being told at a fourth bank that he could not withdraw his 120 euros.

TOPSHOTS A distressed pensioner sits on the ground outside a national bank branch, as banks opened only for pensioners to allow them to withdraw their pensions, with a limit of 120 euros, in Thessaloniki, on July 3, 2015. Greece is almost evenly split over a crucial weekend referendum that could decide its financial fate, with a 'Yes' result possibly ahead by a whisker, the latest survey Friday showed. Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras's government is asking Greece's voters to vote 'No' to a technically phrased question asking if they are willing to accept more tough austerity conditions from international creditors in exchange for bailout funds. AFP PHOTO /SAKIS MITROLIDIS

Chatzifotiadis had spent years working at a German coal mine “very hard” and later at a foundry. Following the run-around on Friday he collapsed. “I cannot stand to see my country in this distress,” he told the AFP news agency.

CRYING3

He would like to exercise his right to vote at Sunday’s referendum, however the polling station is 80 kilometers away and he “has no money to go there, unless perhaps if my children would take me in their car.”