‘NO’!
Thousands flood Madrid in second day of anti-cuts demos
Thousands
of Spaniards have returned to Madrid’s Plaza de Neptune to protest
the latest, highly contentious wave of austerity measures, following
a violent police crackdown on Tuesday.
RT,
26
September, 2012
For
the second day running, thousands of demonstrators led by the
so-called indignados, or outraged, descended on the square – some
100 meters from Spain’s Congress building. Many in the crowd
chanted "government,
resign!"while
hoisting up placards bearing the slogan “No” in
opposition to the country's austerity program.
There
was a tense standoff between demonstrators and police, who have
formed a security cordon around the square. Police eventually
yielded, as the protesters poured onto the square amidst jubilant
cheers.
Pamphlets
have been circulating through the crowd imploring those present not
to repeat Tuesdays’s mistakes. The tract implores those present not
to provoke the police, giving them a pretext to cripple the event,
and has recommended a sit in protest.
Minor
scuffles have periodically broken out between protesters, though in
each case they quickly were resolved without police intervention.
The
demonstrators are calling for new elections, saying the proposal of
deeper budget cuts proves the ruling Popular Party has lost its
legitimacy by failing to keep its promises.
The
Bank of Spain said Wednesday that the country, where one in four
faces unemployment, is in the grips of a deep depression.
Evictions
have also skyrocketed across Spain as thousands have failed to repay
bank loans. Many protesters were particularly enraged that the
government was making cuts to health, education and public sector
salaries while pumping funds into the country's ailing banking sector
to keep it afloat.
Clashes erupted
Tuesday between
protesters and police, who used batons and rubber bullets to
disperse the crowd.
The
violent protest led to 38 arrests and 64 injuries, including eight
police officers. The growing tensions come as the government is
preparing a new round of austerity measures in its draft budget for
2013 on Thursday.
Protesters sit down as Spanish National Police officers in riot gear stand guard behind a fence closing the street outside Madrid's Parliament during a demonstration September 26, 2012. (Reuters/Sergio Perez)
Reuters/Paul Hanna
AFP Photo/Dominique Faget
Riot
rage: Athens protesters throw firebombs, police shoot tear gas
A
rally in the Greek capital turned violent when protesters in Syntagma
Square lobbed Molotov cocktails at police, who retaliated by firing
tear gas at the demonstrators.
RT,
26
September, 2012
Security
forces also reportedly used flashbang grenades and pepper spray to
push protesters back from the parliament building. According to Greek
newspaper Kathimerin, the police had been ordered to refrain from
using chemicals against protesters.
Around
70,000 people, as estimated by Reuters, gathered in front of the
parliament for the country’s biggest anti-austerity protest since
the new government came to power.
"EU,
IMF out!"
shouted the angry crowd.
"For
the past two-to-three years we've been living an incredible social
catastrophe,"
one of the protesters told Agence France Presse. "My
salary has been cut by 50 percent. I have two children and tomorrow I
don't know if I'll have a job."
Clashes
erupted in different parts of Athens Syntagma Square, with
demonstrators throwing fire bombs at police.
A riot police officer prepares to throw a teargas cannister to protestors during clashes near Syntagma square during a 24-hour labour strike in Athens.(Reuters / Yorgos Karahalis)
Witnesses
reported smoke rising over the square as security forces dispersed
most of the protesters. Some remained, and continued the
demonstration; others relocated to the streets of Panepistimiou and
Benaki, where again started clashing with riot police.
Some
120 arrest were made throughout the capital. Police say protesters
smashed bus stop kiosks and set fire to garbage cans.
Several
people sustained injuries.
More
than 3,000 police officers – double the usual number – were
deployed in the capital of Athens to counter the protesters.
On
Wednesday, Greece was gripped by a 24-hour general strike, which
halted transit and other industries nationwide. Flights and trains
were suspended, shops were shuttered and the hospitals were forced to
rely on emergency staffing. The strike was called by the country’s
two largest trade unions, representing half of Greece’s workers.
Teargas canisters explode beside riot police officers near Syntagma square during a 24-hour labour strike in Athens.(Reuters / Yannis Behrakis)
As
many as 350,000 Greeks poured out into streets across the country to
protest austerity, estimates the civil servants union ADEDY.
In
the second largest city of Thessaloniki, around 18,000 demonstrators
rallied. Greeks wrote on Twitter that large numbers of protesters are
rallying peacefully in the streets. Earlier demonstrations there saw
youths setting fire to debris, burning an EU flag, and then clashing
with riot police.
Supporters of the Greek Communist party march by the parliament during a 24-hour labour strike in Athens.(Reuters / Yannis Behrakis)
Greece
recently enacted a new round of spending cuts, totaling €11.5
billion ($15 billion). The austerity measures are a precondition for
another rescue loan from the European Central Bank; without the
bailout, Greece could face bankruptcy in a matter of weeks.
"The
new measures are unbearable, unfair and only worsen the crisis. We
are determined to fight until we win," Costas
Tsikrikas, head of the ADEDY public sector union told Reuters. "We
call on all workers to join us in the march against the policies that
the troika is imposing."
A demonstrator throws a molotov cocktail to riot police officers near Syntagma square during a 24-hour labour strike in Athens.(Reuters / Yannis Behrakis)
Greece
is currently grappling with record unemployment levels, with over 30
percent of the country living below the poverty line.
The
Greek government is planning to reduce pensions and increase the
retirement age to 67 to cope with the country’s budget crisis.
Dimitri
Kofinas, an RT producer at Capital Account, in Washington told RT
that he doubts whether the best efforts of the EU’s leaders to save
Greece with bailouts will come to anything, “We’re past the point
where policy makers in Europe can effectively deal with the
situation, but taking that aside anywhere else this would just be too
much and I think the markets are going to take over and they are
already doing that in the bond market,” he said.
Two
weeks ago, anger over Greece’s new austerity measures spilled
into the streets,
with thousands protesting the drastic proposed budget cuts.
Last
February, the country witnessed days of violent
clashes in
several cities, with police using tear gas and protesters throwing
petrol bombs and stones.
Photo by user jamesmatesitv shows petrol bombs hitting ranks of riot police during an anti-austerity rally at Syntagma Square in Athens on September 26, 2012 (Image from Twitter.com)
A riot police officer throws a teargas cannister to protestors during clashes near Syntagma square during a 24-hour labour strike in Athens.(Reuters / Yorgos Karahalis)
Screenshot from AP video
A demonstrator hurls a stone to riot police officers during clashes near Syntagma square during a 24-hour labour strike in Athens.(Reuters / Yorgos Karahalis)
Screenshot from AP video
Supporters of the Greek Communist party march to the parliament during a 24-hour labour strike in Athens.(Reuters / John Kolesidis)
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