Presidential Decree 11/2025 paves the way for a demographic transformation and the replacement of the Greek population. Legalised ethnic replacement as 16,000 Greek villages surrendered, as the Mitsotakis government is preparing 16,000 migrant reception centres in settlements across the country.
With the enactment of Presidential Decree 11/2025 (Government Gazette 194/15 April 2025), the Greek government is leading the nation toward an unprecedented disaster. This decree effectively legalises the mass settlement of 1.6 million illegal immigrants—misleadingly referred to as “refugees”—throughout rural Greece.
Our homeland is being turned into an immense reception zone, while native Greeks are being pushed out of their villages in an alarming process of displacement and replacement. According to Article B1 of the decree, any settlement with fewer than 2,000 residents—amounting to some 16,000 villages nationwide—can now be repurposed into a ‘temporary’ accommodation centre for up to 100 migrants each.
This would see 1.6 million foreigners dispersed across the Greek countryside, threatening social cohesion and turning these areas into fragmented zones with rising insecurity. Worse still, the decree includes provisions that convert thousands of plots in these villages into designated ‘farmland,’ barring Greeks from building homes on their own land. In effect, locals are being pushed out, their property values decimated, and their communities overtaken—part of what appears to be a systematic population replacement plan.
This is occurring at a time when the rest of Europe is tightening immigration controls, alarmed by rising crime and the transformation of urban centres into ghettos. Yet in Greece, rather than securing our borders, we are leaving them dangerously open. The Coast Guard now operates more as a reception agency than a border authority. Migrants arrive daily—particularly via Crete—as though there were a direct ferry service from Africa.
Mainstream media portray these incursions as “rescues,” with migrants transported to Piraeus and from there placed in facilities and homes, often in central Athens, with NGO support and state benefits. Now, this policy is expanding to 16,000 settlements across the country, pushing every corner of Greece toward chaos and insecurity.
To compound the crisis, the same decree authorises the unregulated installation of wind turbines and photovoltaic arrays in these villages, further disfiguring the Greek countryside and threatening its environmental and cultural character. At the same time, Germany is pressuring Greece to accept 80,000 additional migrants as a “first instalment” of forced repatriation from the EU.
It is clear: Greece is being turned into a human warehouse, with full complicity from a government implementing a programme that endangers our national integrity and existence.
This is not merely a policy—it is a historic betrayal. This Presidential Decree represents an unfolding nightmare: a direct attack on Greek identity, heritage, and security. The replacement of our population is no longer a theoretical risk; it is a reality. To remain silent now is to become complicit in this national tragedy.