- Farmers and livestock breeders block key sections of the VOAK highway in Heraklion and Chania.
- Rethymno protesters plan symbolic occupations of public buildings.
- Road closures may cause delays and confusion for travelers.
- Tourism bodies warn of economic impact if disruptions continue.
- Farmers demand urgent government intervention amid sector collapse.
Crete’s road network — the lifeline connecting airports, ports, and resorts — is once again under pressure. Farmers and livestock breeders, facing rising costs and dwindling support, have set up roadblocks along the VOAK highway in Heraklion and Chania, threatening to expand their demonstrations to public buildings.
On Thursday afternoon, protesters at the former KTEO junction in Heraklion planned to close both lanes of the VOAK from 14:30, a move that could choke local traffic and delay airport transfers at the height of autumn travel.
As one hotel owner in Ammoudara put it:
“It only takes one closed road for the island to feel smaller. Guests miss flights, buses back up, and the phones never stop ringing.”
Meanwhile, in Rethymno, livestock breeders staged peaceful sit-ins at several public offices, including the Prefecture, the Courthouse, and the Tax Authority. The symbolic acts of protest drew sympathy from locals — and concern from tour operators who depend on uninterrupted access to the island’s western routes.
The Voices Behind the Roadblocks
For the farmers, the road closures are not a show of strength but a cry of exhaustion.
“We know tourists are affected,” said a Chania livestock breeder. “But we are affected every day — our herds, our income, our dignity. If the island depends on us, the island should hear us.”
In Chania’s Tsikalaria area, the roadblock turned semi-permanent, as farmers vowed to remain until “real guarantees” were offered by Athens. Young herders and veteran farmers stood shoulder to shoulder, describing what they called “the slow death of livestock farming in Crete.”
Despite the tension, all demonstrations so far have remained peaceful, with roads reopening intermittently to ease traffic for locals and visitors.
Tourism Braces for Ripple Effects
While Crete’s main resorts continue to operate normally, travel agencies warn that even symbolic disruptions can create anxiety among visitors.
The Region of Crete’s tourism department is closely monitoring the situation, urging calm and coordination.
“Protests are part of democracy,” said one official from the Heraklion Chamber of Commerce, “but we must avoid sending the wrong message abroad. Tourism and agriculture are both vital — one cannot prosper while the other collapses.”
As ferry lines, taxis, and rental car companies brace for possible detours, the underlying issue remains the same: how to balance Crete’s economic pillars — tourism and primary production — without letting one crush the other.
By Thursday evening, farmers across Heraklion, Chania, and Rethymno were expected to meet to decide whether the demonstrations would escalate or soften. Symbolic occupations of public buildings remain “on the table,” according to local representatives.
For now, traffic continues, olive trees sway indifferently, and the island holds its breath. But if the protests intensify, Crete’s next high season could begin under the same cloud — one of frustration, resilience, and a deep reminder that paradise, too, must occasionally protest to survive.
As protests intensify across Crete, Lassithi MP Katerina Spyridaki joined the rising political chorus demanding immediate government action. In a sharply worded statement, she accused Athens of abandoning the island’s farmers and livestock breeders at a time when both agriculture and tourism depend on their survival.
“From Lassithi, the heart of Greece’s vegetable production, the voice of the people of the land can no longer remain on the margins,” Spyridaki said, sending a message of full support to Crete’s primary producers.
She described the farmers’ presence at roadblocks not as a political stunt but as a matter of survival, noting that they have been “driven to desperation” by rising fuel, energy, and fertilizer costs, and by subsidies that arrive late — or not at all.
From Greenhouses to Olive Groves, a System Near Collapse
Spyridaki painted a grim picture of Crete’s agricultural backbone:
- The greenhouses of Ierapetra struggle under electricity costs that make irrigation nearly unaffordable.
- The olive growers of Sitia face another year of reduced yields and soaring production prices.
- The shepherds of Lassithi Plateau and the mountain villages have seen feed costs “exceed all precedent.”
“The farmers who keep Greece fed wake up before dawn to water, harvest, and feed their animals,” she said. “They do not block roads out of choice, but because the State has left them no other road to take.”
“A Scandal That Goes Beyond Money”
Referring to the ongoing OPEKEPE scandal, Spyridaki called it “not merely financial, but moral,” stressing that “it punishes those who work honestly and rewards those who never had dirt under their fingernails.”
Tourism professionals have echoed her warning: when the fields wither, so does the island’s image. Visitors come to Crete for its olive oil, honey, cheese, and local vegetables — all of which depend on the farmers now camping in roadside tents.
Economists point out that Crete’s food exports and agrotourism products are tightly linked: every empty greenhouse, every neglected olive grove, eventually shows up as an empty taverna table.
“You cannot have a tourism paradise sitting on agricultural poverty,” said one local tourism consultant in Agios Nikolaos. “The two either grow together or collapse together.”
“It’s Not a Protest — It’s Proof of Survival”
Spyridaki concluded with an appeal for action, not statements:
“The image of people sleeping at roadblocks is not protest — it’s proof of survival. Whoever governs must listen, respond, and finally act.”
Her words resonated deeply across the Lassithi region, where the farmers’ struggle is now seen as part of a broader fight — not just for fair prices, but for the soul of Crete’s land and the authenticity that keeps visitors coming back.