Greeks Gather To Protest Austerity Measures, Some With Violence

Greek Austerity Protests

First Posted: 06/15/11 09:21 AM ET Updated: 08/15/11 06:12 AM ET

ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Groups of youths on the edge of a major anti-austerity protest in Athens threw rocks and firebombs at police outside Parliament, where the struggling government sought support for new cutbacks required to avoid a debt default.

At a rally of more than 20,000 in the Syntagma Square, police responded with tear gas to push the protesters away from barricades erected to protect the Parliament building and the lawmakers arriving to debate the new austerity plan.

Other demonstrators who had been part of the previously peaceful gathering also clashed with the violent groups of hooded youths, trying to eject them from their rally.

The protests were part of a 24-hour general strike against the new cutbacks, which the country must pass in order to continue receiving funding from a euro110 billion international bailout that is preventing it from defaulting on its debts.

A large part of central Athens was closed to all traffic and pedestrians as police mounted a huge security operation to allow lawmakers access to Parliament by car. Some 5,000 officers, including hundreds of riot and motorcycle police, used parked buses and crowd barriers to prevent protesters from encircling the building.

"Resign, resign," the crowd chanted outside Parliament. The protesters included both young and old, and many brought their children, hoisting them onto their shoulders to shield them from the crush.

Two separate marches organized by trade unions joined the rally in Syntagma. Such demonstrations have often turned violent in the past – three clerks died when rioters torched their bank in Athens last May.But the latest austerity drive has brought many people onto the streets for the first time.

"What can we do? We have to fight, for our children and for us," said Dimitra Nteli, a nurse at a state hospital who was at the protest with her daughter. "After 25 years of work I earn 1,100 euros a month. Now that will drop to 900. How can we live on that?"

Her 26-year-old daughter, Christina, said the situation in Greece had led her to leave for the U.K. to study conflict resolution.

"I have no job here. There are no prospects," she said.

Police spokesman Athanassios Kokalakis said 10 protesters were briefly detained. About a hundred people booed and heckled as cars carrying Prime Minister George Papandreou and President Karolos Papoulias swept past for a meeting.

The general strike crippled public services across the country, leaving state hospitals running on emergency staff, disrupting port traffic and public transport, and forced radio and television news programs off the air during the morning. Journalists' unions called off their strike to cover developments in Athens.

Flights were also operating normally after the air traffic controllers' union dropped out of the strike.

"They keep asking us to give more," said Ilias Iliopoulos, general secretary of the civil servants' union ADEDY. "Now, again, they will cut our salaries and bonuses, from the little that we have left."

The government needs to pass a new 2012-2015 austerity program worth euro28 billion ($40.5 billion) this month – or face being cut off from the rescue loans from European countries and the International Monetary Fund.

To meet their commitments, Papandreou's Socialists' abandoned a pledge not to impose new taxes and have drawn up a four-year privatization program worth euro50 billion ($72 billion) – further fueling protests against austerity by public utility employees and other affected groups.

Some governing party lawmakers have publicly criticized the new cuts. One of them defected on Tuesday, reducing Papandreou's parliamentary majority to five in the 300-seat legislature. Another Socialist lawmaker said he will vote against the bill, which is set for final approval by early next month.

Papandreou faces an open revolt from his own party and a refusal by the main opposition conservatives to back the new austerity bills, despite EU pressure for cross-party support.

Papandreou met with the president to discuss how to solve the crisis.

"A national effort is required. Because we are at a historically crucial moment and a time of crucial decisions," Papandreou told Papoulias, adding that he was still in contact with opposition party leaders in an effort to garner cross-party support for the austerity drive.

"But on the other hand, everyone has to assume their responsibilities," Papandreou told the president, according to a transcript of their conversation released by the prime minister's office. "In any case, we will move forward with this sense of responsibility and the necessary decisions" to pull Greece out of the crisis.

The statements calmed concern, voiced mainly in the local media, that the prime minister might have been considering calling early elections.

The Socialists' popularity plummeted in recent weeks over the new austerity plan. A weekend opinion poll gave the main opposition conservatives a four-point lead over their Socialist rivals, the first time the party has been ahead in surveys since 2009. The next general election is scheduled for October 2013.

With its credit rating deep in junk status, Greece is being kept afloat by the EU and IMF bailout, but will need additional support to cover financing gaps next year as high interest rates will prevent it from tapping the bond market next year, contrary to what the original bailout agreement had predicted.

On Monday night, Standard & Poor's slashed Greece's rating from B to CCC, dropping it to the very bottom of the 131 states that have a sovereign debt rating. That suggests Greece's creditors are less likely to get their money back than those of Pakistan, Ecuador or Jamaica.

____

Nicholas Paphitis, Derek Gatopoulos, Petros Giannakouris and Lefteris Pitarakis in Athens contributed.

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ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Groups of youths on the edge of a major anti-austerity protest in Athens threw rocks and firebombs at police outside Parliament, where the struggling government sought support ...
ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Groups of youths on the edge of a major anti-austerity protest in Athens threw rocks and firebombs at police outside Parliament, where the struggling government sought support ...
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elsquibbs
Socially liberal, fiscally prudent atheist.
11:01 AM on 06/16/2011
Austerity is what inevitably happens when the government provides everything "for free." Why is this a surprise to anyone? Demand to be provided for, complain about austerity. Insanity.
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Ragnar Danneskjold
Defender of Liberty
09:45 AM on 06/16/2011
You have to see the irony here. These people are suffering from a self-inflicted overspending wound and they protest by wanting to continue overspending. You can't make this stuff up. This is the disorder of socialism. This is the menace to the mind of dependency. This is an entire nation that is suffering a mental malaise where they think the solution is to reject the medecine. Wow.
12:34 PM on 06/16/2011
you are hilarious! i love the sarcastic comments on here, LOL
05:08 AM on 06/16/2011
I think I see America's future..........
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01:36 AM on 06/16/2011
Such a smart way to voice your dismay with being broke......vandalize and burn down your city.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
karen1p
01:43 AM on 06/16/2011
Perhaps you've never seen the collapse of a currency? Hang tight....I do believe we're on for a bumpy ride.....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
karen1p
01:30 AM on 06/16/2011
"Resign, resign," the crowd chanted outside Parliament = #GreekRevolution

Where's OUR courage?? = #USRevolution
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Trustfunded1
10:32 PM on 06/15/2011
When ever Riot Dog is out with the protestors I make a bundle shorting this market.

Go Riot Dog!!!
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Joe Friday
07:35 PM on 06/15/2011
When the Government gives and gives, than the Government takes it away, we will see the chaos of the "Nanny State"!

Damn, we need to cut and cut and cut. We are in for some serious backlash!

HELP!!!!!! HELP!!!!!!! The curse of Liberalism is at the door!
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08:08 PM on 06/15/2011
will there be any one demographic that will not incur cuts?
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Joe Friday
08:23 PM on 06/15/2011
greenbags ... Government!
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flaconoire
Anartist
10:25 PM on 06/15/2011
I bet the Pentagon will do just fine there, they have nothing to worry about.
05:11 AM on 06/16/2011
I guess you call HARD WORKING Americans who can't find jobs.....the curse of liberalism.

Maybe the curse of wingnut conservatism.....voodoo economics, deregulation, outsourcing are the more likely causes of the problem?
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wizedollars
"Those who like Neil Diamond, and those who don't.
07:32 PM on 06/15/2011
Iceland is the template for Greece in recovering and maintaining their national and economic sovereignty in the process.

http://www.irishcentral.com/news/What-Ireland-can-learn-from-Icelands-economic-recovery----111721169.html?page=1
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wizedollars
"Those who like Neil Diamond, and those who don't.
07:19 PM on 06/15/2011
Hold strong Greece; Iceland said no to the banksters' demands and are on their way to recovery
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Ragnar Danneskjold
Defender of Liberty
09:46 AM on 06/16/2011
All 52 citizens.
06:14 PM on 06/15/2011
There is not going to be any easy way out for Greece, they are broke plain and simple. People can/should protest how that happened, but nothing is going to change the past at this point. Their current spending operates in a deficit and there are only so many avenues they can take to fund:

1) Raise revenue through taxes, they are in a recession like everyone else so this will be difficult. Plus traditionally Greek tax collection was abstract at best.

2) Borrow money, this is the biggie, but borrow from who? Yes S&P gave a rating cut, so what they did a terrible job on our mortgage market. The reality is any party (ie EU country, China, etc) has the full right to extend Greece a line of credit at any rate they want. Everyone is hiding behind the S&P rating because no one wants to lend

3) Currency, print your own money. Well they are on the euro so that won't work because they don't have control. The could decouple and go back to printing drachmas, but then they will have rampant inflation as that will never be a reserve currency with stability.

4) Bailout, this is what they really want in the protests. Keep the status quo system and just bridge the gap. Not a big fan of bailout, including Wall St. But if we are planning on throwing around a few billion it better be on folks in this country.
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FogBelter
Illegitimis non carborundum
05:21 PM on 06/15/2011
Greece could turn the global economy turtle ... this is very bad for Bankers, but probably no so bad for the Greeks in the long run.
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05:00 PM on 06/15/2011
"Standard & Poor's slashed Greece's rating from B to CCC, dropping it to the very bottom of the 131 states that have a sovereign debt rating." What fundamental changes occurred to warrant this dramatic ratings change?

Why does anyone pay attention to these fickle folk who have such a Poor Standard of competence or neutrality?

I wish that people with this kind of influence were held accountable to the same standard as labourers - satisfy your job description or lose your job.

Their job description is to independently analyse risk; their real job is protecting speculators which they do admirably. I just don't understand why their credibility is still intact after demonstrating either incompetence or fraud regarding repackaged mortgage risk.

Many struggling Greeks will struggle even more after this reckless, self-fulfilling prophecy.

And the speculators will be just fine with that and buy a round for their S&P enablers.
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05:09 PM on 06/15/2011
they're banking hireling's...at best conflict of interest at worst puppets.

They should have caught and called out the banking debt concealment scheme in 2001 but who has that continued to splendidly benefit, the people?
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Ragnar Danneskjold
Defender of Liberty
09:47 AM on 06/16/2011
Are you serious? Why don't you lend them some of your money and see if you get paid back.
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01:18 PM on 06/16/2011
explain that logic. The EU, ECB, IMF (all of us) are making banks whole for their misdeeds and Greek public assets are being impounded.

Does their predacious financial alchemy warrant payback? If so, in full? Was there fraud? Bribery? Lying under oath? Distortion(s)? How much transparency has there been? Who is controlling the messaging, thus the blame?
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Bryan --
The Right is usually right
04:38 PM on 06/15/2011
Lazy Socialist...
Always looking for a handout and a free lunch. 35 hour workweeks and 6 weeks of vacation with riduculous retirement benefits are not competitive in the world marketplace...
You Greeks better wake up and make the decision to work your way out of your troubles...
You owe the money.. PAY UP!
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wizedollars
"Those who like Neil Diamond, and those who don't.
07:21 PM on 06/15/2011
To the banksters that sold the firecracker bonds that were designed to blow up and socialize the losses on the backs of the taxpayers, yeah that makes sense, pay up Greece....
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flaconoire
Anartist
10:23 PM on 06/15/2011
Hey, that sounds good to me, we will have to make the banksters really work while stealing our money.
04:09 PM on 06/15/2011
the next step is for a strong-man (or woman) to seize power, all assets, magically cast away the debt the Greeks have built up over years from other countries, and hand out money and vacations to everyone.

Presumably Greece will be cast out of the EU, so it will have to figure a way to arm itself against any country that doesn't like its debt holdings being erased.

Sure, some people will have to work, especially those with no connections to the benevolent leader, but they can easily be forced into labor at gunpoint. Those who don't comply can be jailed, and tortured! Hurrah!

This situation will fit the Greeks much better than any sort of reliance on individual merit and talent. The Greeks don't want free markets or democracy, they want vacations, cigars, a bit of work here and there, perhaps, and souvlaki. OOMPA!
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04:56 PM on 06/15/2011
my, what profundity.
05:17 AM on 06/16/2011
Another Repug talking about magical thinking and actions once again.

Only kids believe in fairy tales.
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Claudette McCubbin
Seizing the moment as we speak...
04:07 PM on 06/15/2011
Actually the only reason there are no protest here in America is because for many years protests have been frowned upon so protesting is not an option. That said, the youth prefers to spend the summer at a music festival... Note that none of this said youth meccas (coachella, bonnaroo, ultra) have any stands that touch any political views or even give out any pamphlets.... sad.
05:19 AM on 06/16/2011
A lot depends on how bad things get and how desperate people get.

I know some of my own family and friends are depressed and angry over what is happening.
Yes, they are afraid for the future.