Amnesty International yesterday published their 2014-2015 annual report on the state of the world's human rights. 

 
In Greece's case the report highlighted a previous report by the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture in 2013 which had criticised unsanitary conditions and inadequate healthcare in Greek prisons, as well as documenting a large number of allegations of ill treatment by law enforcement officials both in police and border guard stations. 
 
Amnesty International reports that allegations of torture and other ill treatment have continued against both prisoners and migrants/refugees, referencing one case in a prison in Northern Greece last year where an inmate was reportedly tortured to death by prison guards. 13 prison guards were subsequently charged with “aggravated torture that caused death”.
 
The organisation also found that police had used excessive force and misused chemical irritants against protesters and journalists on several occasions, and that excessive force and ill treatment by police officers wasn't being investigated adequately, “sporadic convictions of offending law enforcement officers failed to dent the longstanding culture of impunity for police abuses”.
 
Roma families continue to face eviction and discriminatory police raids, and the report notes that although there has been a decrease in organized racist attacks against migrants, there has been an increase in hate crimes against lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex people in 2014. The criminal justice system's response to hate crimes remains inadequate, they conclude. 
 
You can view the full report here