Greek police clash with demonstrators protesting Obama’s visit to Athens
RT,
15
November, 2016
Leftist
demonstrators protesting against US President Barack Obama’s visit
to Athens have clashed with police, who used tear gas to disperse the
crowd as people tried to break through cordons.
Protesters
run away from teargas as they clash with riot police during a
demonstration against the visit of U.S President Barack Obama, in
Athens, Greece, November 15, 2016. © Alkis Konstantinidis /
Reuters
Some
7,000 people took to the streets of central Athens on Tuesday to
protest Obama’s visit to the Greek capital, Reuters reports. The
demonstrators initially planned to walk all the way to the US Embassy
located in another part of the city, but the procession was disrupted
as protesters clashed with police officers.
“We
don't need protectors!" one
of the banners carried by the demonstrators read. Some could be heard
exclaiming: “Yankees
go home!”
One
protester was seen setting an American flag on fire.
All
public gatherings were banned in the central part of Athens due to
Obama’s two-day visit. Riot police parked buses along Obama’s
route and erected cordons.
No
injuries or arrests have been reported so far, according to AP.
More
than 5,000 police officers were deployed in central Athens to
maintain order.
Nearly
1,000 people took part in a similar protest in Greece’s second
biggest city, Thessaloniki.
Protesters
are rallying against US policy that is “creating
tensions” with
various countries around the world, starting with China and Russia,
as well as against the US attempts to “overthrow
the government in Ukraine,” Greek
journalist Aris Chatzistefanou told RT. Apart from that, protesters
are blaming the US for supporting“Islamic
extremists”which
led to“well-known
consequences.”
“While
the Greek government is trying to present the visit of Obama as a
visit of a peacemaker, thousands of demonstrators came onto the
streets to protest US policy in [such] parts of the world from Latin
America to Middle East, Afghanistan and Syria,” Chatzistefanou
said.
“The
government was trying to present to the Greek public that Barack
Obama will come and help with the austerity policy that was imposed
by the Troika,” Chatzistefanou
said, also adding that there is “no
direct connection” between
Obama’s promises and what the IMF is planning to do.
Protesters
clash with riot police during a demonstration against the visit of
U.S President Barack Obama, in Athens, Greece, November 15, 2016. ©
Alkis Konstantinidis / Reuters
Notis
Marias, an independent member of the European Parliament, believes
that the difference in attitudes toward the US in Greece lies in the
hope of the Greek parliament that President Obama might influence the
EU and the IMF over the austerity measures – an idea that, however,
looks rather improbable.
“Obama
is an outgoing president. He is not going to be in office in two
months. Trump might follow a different approach. I think that Obama
can’t help Greece,” Marias
told RT.
Obama
may be advocating for Greece in an effort to reach an agreement with
the US regarding LNG (liquefied natural gas) that could be
transferred from Texas via Greece to the Balkan region, Marias
suggested.
Obama’s
visit nearly coincides with Greece’s annual anti-American
demonstrations carried out to commemorate a pro-democracy student
protest that was harshly suppressed by military forces in 1973.
This
is the first time that Obama has visited Greece during his eight
years in office. Last time Greece was visited by a US president when
Bill Clinton held the office in 1999. His visit also saw extensive
street fighting between anarchists and riot police.
Protesters
clash with riot police during a demonstration against the visit of
U.S President Barack Obama, in Athens, Greece, November 15, 2016. ©
Alkis Konstantinidis / Reuters
Authorities
had to step up security measures "as
the circumstances require," with
a number of protests planned, a police source told AFP earlier today.
Obama
left Washington on Monday, embarking on his last trip across Europe
before President-elect Donald Trump assumes his post in January 2017.
He
is to spend one more day in Greece to continue the discussion of
Greece's economic situation and Europe's migration crisis. He will
then leave for Germany on Wednesday, intending to soothe concerns
over Trump’s upcoming presidency.
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