Greek Police Fire Tear Gas to Disperse Protesters Before Vote on Austerity
Greek Police Fire Tear Gas to Disperse Protesters Before Vote on Austerity
Greek Police Fire Tear Gas to Disperse Protesters Before Vote on Austerity
Greek police fired tear gas to disperse protesters in the center of Athens as labor unions shut down government services before a vote on austerity measures that may determine if the nation can avoid a default.
Lawmakers have now begun a second day of debate on Prime Minister
George Papandreou?s five-year plan of budget cuts and asset sales after a crowd estimated by police to number 20,000 thronged outside Parliament to mark a 48-hour general strike. Hooded youths faced volleys of tear gas as they attacked riot officers, smashed windows at a
McDonald?s Corp (MCD) restaurant and set two vans on fire.
?We are determined to stop this plan from passing and if it does pass, we will continue our efforts,? said Dimitra Oikonomou, 50, a schoolteacher who joined today?s rallies. ?The government might not listen to us now, but in the end they will hear it all at once.?
Papandreou faces his second survival test in a week tomorrow when lawmakers vote on the package that?s needed before the cash-strapped nation can tap a fifth loan payment from last year?s 110 billion-euro ($157 billion) rescue.
Failure to pass the government?s 78 billion-euro plan may lead to the euro area?s first sovereign default.
?Voting for the medium-term plan means we can close this chapter of uncertainty for the Greek people,? Papandreou told lawmakers at the start of a three-day debate late yesterday. ?From the brink of catastrophe we are securing, colleagues, the great opportunity to change our country.?
Vote Looms
Papandreou?s Pasok party has 155 of the 300 seats in the legislature, and his ability to keep his lawmakers united in two votes this week on budget cuts and asset sales will be critical to his victory. Two of them have said they may vote against the legislation, in part due to their opposition to plans to sell a stake in Public Power Corp. SA.
One of the dissident lawmakers, Thomas Robopoulos, told Skai TV today that he was moved by Papandreou?s comments yesterday and that
Greece faces critical times. He said he will decide on how to vote during the final debate tomorrow.
Workers at the former electricity monopoly have held rolling 48-hour strikes for the past week, leading to power cuts around the country.
Asset Sales
State-asset sales are the ?first pillar? in any new financing package for Greece and an important factor for its European Union and International Monetary Fund partners, who are supplying the aid, Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos said in parliament today. He spoke as a debate on the second bill, the so-called Implementation Law, began under a fast-track process, to make a June 30 deadline.
Air traffic controllers are ceasing work for eight hours today and tomorrow, according to a statement on the union?s website. That has caused the cancellation of all flights into and out of the
Athens International Airport, the country?s biggest, between 8 a.m. and midday and 6 p.m. and 10 p.m. today.
Aegean Airlines SA (AEGN) will reschedule 97 flights and cancel 26 today. Another 17 routes will be cut tomorrow and flight times for 82 domestic and international destinations changed. Olympic Air will cancel and reschedule 52 flights today.
Bus, trolley, and tram workers in Athens have joined the strike, as have staff at Hellenic Railways Organization, Greece?s state-run rail company. Dockworkers, journalists, health-care and municipal workers are also participating.
Protest Slogans
Protesters chanted slogans against the government as they marched. One banner read ?Bankers are PIGS, not the people,? a reference to the acronym for countries in the EU that have sought aid.
Police deployed 3,000 officers to protect the Parliament building that is the focus of demonstrations. In the square below, they used tear gas to fight protesters throwing pieces of marble chipped with hammers from the sidewalk.
Twenty-eight people were injured in today?s demonstrations, 21 of them police officers, according to information from the Greek police and the health ministry. Five people were arrested in the clashes.
The situation has calmed down now, police spokesman Takis Papapetropoulos said by telephone. The so-called Indignants, the group that has drawn crowds to Parliament for several weeks, has vowed not to leave and urged protestors to return for an evening rally, according to an e-mailed statement.
Subway Working
Workers at the capital city?s subway called off plans to strike, keeping the service open to allow protesters to participate in the rallies.
Papandreou, whose support has slid in opinion polls, has spent the past 15 days trying and failing to muster opposition backing for the package, while keeping his own party in line. He appointed a new finance minister to stem defections, survived a confidence vote and outlined 5.6 billion euros of additional budget measures.
On June 24, he won a pledge for a second bailout from EU leaders, on the condition that he delivers domestic support for the retrenchment.
An accompanying law on the five-year plan which was submitted to Parliament on June 27 must also be approved by the deadline of June 30 before EU finance ministers meet on July 3 to approve the release of the 12 billion-euro tranche of aid.
Greek government officials say they may not have money past mid-July to pay wages and pensions. The country needs to cover 6.6 billion euros of maturing bonds in August.
Recession Impact
Implementing more austerity measures threatens to deepen a three-year recession and complicate efforts to boost government revenue and has stoked discontent among Greeks.
The economy contracted 4.4 percent in 2010 and will shrink a further 3.8 percent this year, according to a report from EU and IMF inspectors in June. The nation?s debt load will peak at 166 percent of gross domestic product next year, and is already the biggest in the euro region?s history.
Papandreou?s plan includes higher taxes on restaurants and bars, higher heating-oil taxes and lowering the tax-free threshold to 8,000 euros from 12,000 euros presently. Greek newspaper
To Vima calculated the additional burden for an average Greek family of four at 2,795 euros a year, about the same as one month?s income.