From Tuesday, strict new rules come into force, banning smoking in many public places.
The clampdown is being seen as part of the government's attempt to clean up the image of the capital, Athens, ahead of the Olympic Games in 2004.
The regulations could have a heavy impact on a nation where 45% of the adult population are smokers, and where smoking in offices and cafes is seen as a traditional right.
But correspondents say previous no-smoking regulations covering taxis and public transport have been ignored by many smokers.
Click here to see European smoking rates
"Greeks can't go without smoking, they will not
accept it," said Athens travel agency worker George Zarifis.
Designated zones
No-smoking signs were being erected on Monday in public sites including waiting rooms, hospitals, railways stations and government buildings.
The rules will eventually be extended to cover all public places, except specially-designated areas.
Fines are being introduced in December for cafes, bars and restaurants where owners have failed to allocate at least half the space to non-smokers.
But that has sparked anger from some cafe owners.
"The no-smoking signs are the easy part. The harder part is to cut the shop up in two," said one Athens cafe owner.
"It's only about 15 square meters (yards) and even if I have a no-smoking area, the smoker is still only one meter away from the non-smoker," he said.
The clampdown on cigarettes is also be extended next January to billboard and cinema advertising.
Greece's smoking population is among the highest in the word. It easily outranks other Western European nations. France, with a 38% total, is the second-highest.
Cancer 'time-bomb'
Greece is also a big tobacco producer - the world's seventh largest - but the country's agriculture minister has promised that farmers will not be hit by the anti-smoking drive.
Correspondents say changing Greek attitudes to smoking is a tough job.
Even attempts to force members of parliament to stop smoking during debates were ignored.
Greece's high smoking rates have sparked warnings from health experts that the country is facing a lung cancer epidemic.
Cases have risen by 50% over the last 30 years, and health professionals say a public health time bomb is waiting to go off.
An estimated 5-6,000 Greeks die from lung cancer every year, more than in any other European country.
"
Even if I have a no-smoking area, the smoker is still only one meter away from the non-smoker
"
Athens cafe owner
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Q&A: The rising tide of lung disease
(21 Nov 01 | Health)
'I survived lung cancer'
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Internet links:
World Health Organisation
|
Greek health figures
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