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Dublin: 11 °C Wednesday 19 June, 2013

Violence breaks out at Greek anti-austerity protest

Tens of thousands of people took to the street during the country’s second general strike in a month with shops closed and public services slowing down for 24 hours.

Protesters throw petrol bombs against riot police during a 24-hour nationwide general strike in Athens.
Protesters throw petrol bombs against riot police during a 24-hour nationwide general strike in Athens.
Image: Thanassis Stavrakis/AP/Press Association Images

HUNDREDS OF YOUTHS pelted riot police with petrol bombs, bottles and chunks of marble today as yet another Greek anti-austerity demonstration descended into violence.

Tens of thousands of people took to the street during the country’s second general strike in a month as workers across the country walked off the job to protest new austerity measures the government is negotiating with Greece’s international creditors.

The measures for 2013-14, worth €13.5 billion, aim to prevent the country from going bankrupt and potentially having to leave the 17-nation eurozone.

Riot police responded with volleys of tear gas and stun grenades as protesters ran from the area of clashes in the capital’s Syntagma Square outside Parliament, splitting the demonstration in two.

Hundreds of police were deployed in the Greek capital ahead of the demonstration, as such protests often turn violent.

Greece Financial Crisis

(Image: Thanassis Stavrakis/AP/Press Association Images)

However, a protest march by about 17,000 people in the northern city of Thessaloniki ended peacefully.

Today’s strike was timed to coincide with a European Union summit in Brussels later in the day, at which Greece’s economic fate will likely feature large.

The strike grounded flights, shut down public services, closed schools, hospitals and shops and hampered public transport in the capital. Taxi drivers joined in for nine hours, while a three-hour work stoppage by air traffic controllers led to flight cancellations. Islands were left cut off as ferries stayed in ports.

Athens has seen hundreds of anti-austerity protests over the past three years, since Greece revealed it had been misreporting its public finance figures. With confidence ravaged and austerity demanded, the country has sunk into a deep economic recession that has many of the same hallmarks of the Great Depression of the 1930s.

“We are sinking in a swamp of recession and it’s getting worse,” said Dimitris Asimakopoulos, head of the GSEVEE small business and industry association. “180,000 businesses are on the brink and 70,000 of them are expected to close in the next few months.”

Higher taxes expected to be levied in the new austerity program will destroy many of the struggling businesses that have managed to weather three years of the crisis so far, he said.

Greece Financial Crisis

(Image: Associated Press)

“In 2011, only 20 percent of businesses were profitable. So these new tax measures present small businesses with a choice: Dodge taxes or close your shop.”

The country is surviving with the help of two massive international bailouts worth a total €240 billion. To secure them, it has committed to drastic spending cuts, tax hikes and reforms, all with the aim of getting the state coffers back under some sort of control.

But while significantly reducing the country’s annual borrowing, the measures have made the recession worse. By the end of next year, the Greek economy is expected to be around a quarter of the size it was in 2008. And with one in four workers out of a job, Greece has, along with Spain, the highest unemployment rate in the 27-nation European Union.

The country’s four-month-old coalition government is negotiating a new austerity package with debt inspectors from the EU, International Monetary Fund and European Central Bank. The idea is to save €11 billion in spending — largely on pensions and health care — and raise an extra €2.5 billion through taxes.

After more than a month and a half of arguing, a deal seems close. On Wednesday, representatives from the EU, International Monetary Fund and European Central Bank, said there was agreement on “most of the core measures needed to restore the momentum of reform” and that the rest of the issues should be resolved in coming days.

Greece is also seeking a two-year extension to its economic recovery program, due to end in 2014. Without the extension, it would need to take €18 billion worth of measures instead of the €13.5 it is currently negotiating.

Athens hopes to get the next loan installment around mid-November. Prime Minister Antonis Samaras has said the country will run out of cash by the end of that month, meaning Greece would most likely have to default on its debt and potentially end its membership of the euro currency.

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Comments (68 Comments)

  • If the government decide to take from the ordinary classes, and leave the wealthy and powerful virtually unscathed again, Ireland will descend into complete chaos very quickly. It’s your call Enda.

    Reply
    • Damocles 18/10/12 #

      As long as they don’t take the Hollande option.

      Reply
    • Barry 18/10/12 #

      I always find these types of comments somewhat amusing, the likes of yourself have been spouting such stuff since 2009 but yet….nothings happened,

      We had the Occupy movement but this pissed off small business owners in Dublin and were full of nut bags who believed fluoride was poison and mind control so they never got public support…..lets also not forget that alot of the Occupy movement supporters setup tents in the likes of Dublin & Waterford but any given night you’d look at the place you’d be lucky to find any people actually present in the tents because the people had gone home to there own houses.

      So that dropped support as did after people heard that the movement was affecting small business owners trying to get by.

      So just when will all these protests happen? When Ireland because of its decisions finally see’s growth and will be years ahead of the likes of Greece economically…is that when it will happen?

      Half the time I read comments like yours the read like some sort of anarchists wet dream, where people want chaos without caring for how this would affect the citizens of the country.

      Reply
    • Barry i read his comment,will you point out where he said he wants chaos,i can’t find it.
      Read it again,no still can’t find it.

      Reply
    • Well said.

      Reply
    • My comment was in answer to @Rodrigo

      Reply
  • Reports of up to 50% of the police are Golden Dawn supporters and growing daily. Not surprising, police forces usually attract facist pigs.

    Reply
    • What I know and have witnessed of Greek police, is they like throwing their weight around on power trips. I fear the Greek situation may explode before long. There is abuse and corruption everywhere, but Greece takes the biscuit.

      Reply
  • fair play! at least some people making a stand, pity the weak Irish wouldn’t do the same

    Reply
    • Isn’t the Irish economy one of the few in the EU likely be in growth in the next few years?

      Reply
    • Do you believe in Santa too?

      Reply
    • 0.7% i believe,if international factors don’t worsen.Open to correction but i think thats the %.

      Reply
    • Yes rioting and bringing the country to a standstill is the way to go for economic recovery.

      Reply
    • @Brian, I don’t believe that begrudging negativity does anyone any favours.

      Reply
    • Living in a delusion doesn’t either.

      Reply
    • Surely Ireland will prosper soon as the positive vibes you’re giving out spread through the land, Brian.

      Reply
    • WS 18/10/12 #

      I agree with you Louise. At least the Greek are showing they are not happy. We have a another budget/austerity measures looming large again. And what will we do? Nothing but p*ss and moan in front of keyboards and winging and shows like Joe Duffy. While the government invent new ways of taking money from everybody’s pockets bar the elite and their own. The lack of protest is due to that the people voted in this government which has the same policies as the last. The bigger joke is that FF are gaining popularity again!!! Nothing changes here politically, they are all in it for themselves, while this country will slip further and further into quite despair.

      Reply
    • Louise, if you think bringing the country to a standstill and throwing petrol bombs at the cops is the way to bring the country out of the hole it’s currently in, off you go.

      For years the Greeks had a culture of paying no tax, they didn’t have a functioning tax collecting body. They cooked the books when the IMF came knocking on their doors, and failed to co-operate with their demands. Now they are out destroying their own country with petulant trantrums because they don’t want austerity. Is this really who we should be modelling ourselves on???

      Reply
    • The ordinary Greek people did not cook the books. The ECB, Goldman Sachs and some greek politicians took that on themselves to do. But like here they’re not the ones suffering and picking up the tab.

      Reply
    • Killing people is not and can never be a rational solution for economic, political or social problems. Please take off your stupid-making hats.

      Reply
  • Up until a couple of weeks ago I had sympathy with the Greeks until I heard they had little or no tax on earnings or vat. Everyone else in Europe does and are trying their best to sort there problems out, but if they won’t even up their tax take then they shouldn’t be given any bailout money. You can’t expect Europe to pay for everything

    Reply
  • do they do anything else in Greece other than striking and protesting?? I know recession etc, but isn’t the european economy maily screwed by Greece… a country where retirement is in early 50s, every small things at work such as punctuality are rewarded with bonuses etc etc….and they’re surprised? it seems Greek narion will never be happy and remain lazy. all they know is to ask for more money of thw IMF…..

    Reply
  • The muppets on here begging for this country to go over the edge. Clearly they have nothing to lose. What about the 85.5% that are still working and would like to keep it that way and who knows, get this country moving again.
    Irresponsible, bitter moran’s…

    Reply
  • Mjhint 18/10/12 #

    The Greeks are in a terrible state. You may say self inflicted & you could be correct. Im no expert I just have an opinion on this & the Greeks that I have met that are working told me they are very worried about the country plunging into chaos. The rise of extreme politics in Greece is no good for the rest of the EU & if an EU member is plunged into revolution & violence what does that say about the EU project. Yes the Greeks are the makers of their misfortune but if it turns to revolution the EU will never recover.

    Reply
  • A statement in the article above that in 2011 only 20% of business’s were profitable sounds to me like a lot more cooking of the books. I am a very small self employed business owner, and I know only too well that profits across the board are way down, and still falling, but I find it hard to believe that 80% of Greek business’s made no profit in 2011.

    Reply
  • the Greeks?sure they invented gayness

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  • We are at Armageddon’s door.There will be more wage cuts on the PAYE workers.For the moment people are either too scared or too chicken to lift a finger .I do not condone violence but enough is enough.Doing nothing will not give our children a brighter future.I wish for massive peaceful and effective protests here,to tell Europe that we are not going to take any more austerity.

    Reply
  • eoghan 18/10/12 #

    Anyone see the difference the Greeks going mad because they they have tough budgets that cut everything they close country because Ireland closes the country because sum peoeple might nt get a big pension the unions are great

    Reply
  • The state of affairs here and in the rest of the EEC are so far gone that a peaceful solution won’t work anymore.Sadly.

    Reply
    • Mjhint 18/10/12 #

      Caroline thats frightening talk. I myself dont see an easy solutions but giving into revolution & violence is not in anyway moving forward. I have 4 children & hunger is still better than war or violence.

      Reply
    • Reg 18/10/12 #

      Go and speak to some people who lived through the last war in Europe then come back and post a sensible comment Caroline.

      Reply
    • Killing and maiming human beings cannot be justified by political or economic opinions. Reading articles and typing words onto a screen makes it easy to dismiss violence as not really “real”. I very much doubt that those of you celebrating these events in Greece would do the same if they were happening in front of you. This really has happened. People really have been seriously hurt, even murdered. Don’t downplay that, and don’t advocate that.

      Reply
  • Killing and maiming human beings cannot be justified by political or economic opinions. Reading articles and typing words onto a screen makes it easy to dismiss violence as not really “real”. I very much doubt that those of you celebrating these events in Greece would do the same if they were happening in front of you. This really has happened. People really have been seriously hurt, even murdered. Don’t downplay that, and don’t advocate that..

    Reply
    • Nickalos….” those of you celebrating these events in Greece”… Really? Celebrating?
      Cop yerself on big mon

      Oh and please do stop tellin people what they can and cant say FFS

      Reply
    • @ Joseph – I think you’ve misread what I’ve wrote; at no stage did I say what people can or cannot say. As for celebrating violence, quite a few of the comments above suggest or state directly that the riots in Greece are justified, they are “a good thing” and that the Irish people are somehow sheep, cowards or remiss for not doing the same. That sounds very much as “celebrating violence” to me.

      And there’s no need to swear or use insulting/offensive language. It doesn’t add anything to your argument.

      Reply
    • There was ONE comment in the vein you refer to, so please quit this nonsense exaggeration.

      ………..One comment………

      Reply
    • I count 17, oddly enough, but with even with one comment, I’m fully in my rights to comment on it. The advantages of living in a society that values free speech and making people responsible for what they say.

      Reply
    • Comment all ya want Nickolas ole son… just dont be expected to be taken seriously, especially when ya come up ridiculous stuff “I count 17, oddly enough”

      Go on, live up to yer belief in “making people responsible for what they say”..and list all 17 comments that in your opinion and again I quote ya “That sounds very much as “celebrating violence” to me.”

      Reply
    • This is rapidly descending into a “Are you looking at my Mott?” situation. I said that violence shouldn’t ever be an opinion as a solution for a political/social/economical problem. You took exception to my saying that, but you’re not saying that you believe otherwise. You’re just picking around the edges of what I’ve written, looking for a fight, but you haven’t addressed the main point in any way. So I’ll leave you to it.

      Reply
    • To make it simple so. I disagree with ur argument that violence can never be a solution for a political/social/economical problems. It is IMO a last resort…..but a resort nonetheless.
      Bye now

      p.s. what a “Mott”?

      Reply
  • @Mjhint:nobody wants violence .But the sad reality is there is too much injustice in this Europe.Why accept every crap the Govt and the EEC dictates( wage cuts….)????It is alas too late for a peaceful solution and the future is very bleak.

    Reply
    • “it is alas too late for a peaceful solution and the future is very bleak.”

      Codswallop.

      We have 85% employment, Ireland is borrowing on the markets. We’re far from armageddon,

      Reply
    • Mjhint 18/10/12 #

      Caroline do you have children & have you ever experienced violent conflict. I am one of those who lost everything in the crash & have huge debts. I know all about injustice but I know things will change & get better. I see it on here in peoples attitudes & posts & I feel the Irish people will break through the hardship eventually. Its in our dna. This is my second recession. The last one I ended up on a life support machine & things got better. My 4 children are still young enough to sort out their future & so am I. I wont stop fighting & complaining & being contrary but violence is a bridge I wont cross. I will leave Ireland before that happens.

      Reply
    • Caroline
      You are talking through the back of your head
      There is no sign whatsoever of violence in this country. All you have to do is look at the latest opinion polls.

      Reply
  • Did I read this right?

    “By the end of next year, the Greek economy is expected to be around a quarter of the size it was in 2008.”

    Surely, this is a misprint. Surely, it should read “By the end of next year, the Greek economy is expected to be around three quarters of the size it was in 2008.”

    Reply

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