The fault line in Greece's unprecedented return to favor with investors runs the length of 5-7 Nikis Street in Athens. "They picked on us because they thought we wouldn't speak up," said Dimitra Manoli, 52, a mother of two who made 500 euros ($687) a month cleaning the tax office in the port of Volos, 320 kilometers from Athens. "The burden sharing has been extremely uneven," said Jens Bastian ...
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