In the quiet pre-dawn hours near Trikala, routine night-shift work turned into a catastrophe that will scar the community for years. Thirteen people went in to keep production lines running; only eight walked out on their own. Four women were later found dead inside the Violanta biscuit plant, and another worker fought for life in hospital as firefighters battled flames, smoke, and collapsing structures.
Now, grief sits heavy over the town: colleagues replay final conversations, families face the unthinkable, and a major local employer must answer hard questions. Authorities sift through twisted steel and scorched machinery, searching for the chain of failures that turned an ordinary shift into a lethal trap. Whatever the final report concludes, the demand is the same—from Trikala and beyond: that these women are not remembered as statistics, but as the reason industrial safety can never be treated as a formality again.