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Petrol
bombs vs teargas: Thousands across Greece protest austerity measures
Youths
have clashed with the Athens police force, pelting officers with
stones and petrol bombs during an anti-austerity march. More than
40,000 have taken to the streets in Greece in a 24-hour strike
against wage and pension cuts.
RT,
18
October, 2012
Anti-austerity
activists faced down police officers, throwing Molotov cocktails and
rocks in the center of Athens. Police responded by firing teargas and
stun grenades into the group of adolescents to disperse them.
Clashes
erupted as protesters broke through a police line on central Syntagma
Square. After the crowd was dispersed, the demonstration resumed
peacefully.
One
person died during the protests. A 66-year-old man died, apparently
of a heart attack, as he was taking part in the demonstration in
Athens.
Authorities
have deployed 4,000 extra police throughout the Greek capital to
maintain law and order during the protests.
Millions
across Greece are participating in a mass 24-hour strike in a bid to
convince politician
s
to let up on the latest round of crippling austerity measures.
In
Athens over 25,000 demonstrators took part in anti-austerity rally.
In the country`s second largest city, Thessaloniki, some 17,000
marched to protest the cuts.
The
strike has led to grounded flights, closed hospitals and the mass
shut-down of public services throughout the country.
The
Greek government is planning to introduce a new round of
belt-tightening cuts, focusing on the public sector for 2013-14. They
aim to qualify for a new bailout package of around 31 billion euro
($40 billion) to keep the country afloat for the time being.
Critics
of the 13.8-billion-euro ($17 billion) austerity package have warned
that it will cripple struggling businesses that has thus far managed
to cope with the financial downturn.
EU
leaders gathered in Brussels on Thursday to discuss the unchecked
financial crisis affecting southern Europe. Although no significant
breakthroughs are expected to be reached during the two-day summit,
the Union’s richer nations will likely rally to support bailout
measures.
Greeks
are facing social disaster as they are dealing with another wave of
devastating cuts to wages, social protection and pensions, Panagiotis
Sotiris told RT.
“The
Political class currently ignores all the signs that come from
society and the same goes from the Troika and especially from the
European Union. But they are just building up explosive material for
next social explosions,” he
said.
Sotiris,
who took part in Thursdays protest, added that no policy can be
maintained simply by being passed through parliament, if it has no
legitimacy in society.He also expressed hope that the country’s
social crisis will eventually change course, relieving the pressures
on young Greeks.
“We
are having a lost generation. We have a generation that has no
future. We have more than 50 per cent actual unemployment,” he
explained comparing the current situation with the Great Depression
of the 1930s.
Sotiris
admitted that in society there is a lot of anger towards Germany and
its chancellor Angela Merkel for pushing through tough austerity
measures. This anger, he says, brings about the analogies with German
occupation. Last week Athens saw active anti-German demonstrations as
Merkel was visiting Greece. Protesters burned swastikas and
chanted “Merkel,
out of Greece!”
Flames from a molotov cocktail flare up near Greek riot police at a protest march by Greece's Communist party in central Athens during a 24-hour labour strike October 18, 2012 (Reuters / Yorgos Karahalis)
Flames from a molotov cocktail flare up near Greek riot police at a protest march by Greece's Communist party in central Athens during a 24-hour labour strike October 18, 2012 (Reuters / Yorgos Karahalis)

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