Thursday, February 25, 2010
50,000 Greek Workers Take to the Streets in Protest
This report just in from the Associated Press makes you wonder if we in the US should have done the same thing during the recent bail out crisis on Wall Street where we rescued banks that were deemed "to big to fail". The same banks that have done next to nothing to help Main Street and yet have reaped the benefit of having our hard earned tax dollars to prop them up while they - wait for it, wait for it - continue to spend foolishly and purchase other banks! I still can't understand how they managed that one AND for the most part made the deadline in paying back funds? To big to fail - really? I think not. However, as I've told people before had something like this happened in another country the people would have taken to the streets in protest and here I give you one such example. Perhaps America could learn something from the Greeks and get a spine!
Some 50,000 Greek workers took to the streets and a few protesters threw rocks and red paint in clashes with police during the widest strike yet against the government's austerity plan aimed at easing the country's debt crisis.
The unrest flared Wednesday amid a looming deadline for demonstrating tough cuts demanded by the European Union and fresh revelations over faulty Greek data reporting that triggered the financial turmoil.
Athens is battling to calm the crisis and European fears it could spread to other countries with troubled finances such as Portugal, Spain and Italy.
Strikes grounded flights, idled cargo ships and ferries, and left commuters in Athens without most public transportation. State-run schools, tax offices and municipalities all shut down and public hospitals limped by using emergency staff.
In the capital, some 50,000 people marched through central Athens to protest spending cuts already imposed. The march itself was peaceful, with clashes taking place after it ended, and comes after public opinion polls suggest many Greeks actually recognize the necessity of painful measures.
But Wednesday was the day for the unions to push back.
``We're all here for the same reason: the measures the government is taking. They have to listen to us,'' said musician Dimitris Petridis, who marched banging a snare drum with colleagues to a funereal rhythm.
``The rise in joblessness has really hurt us. The daily wage for working at a nightclub, for many of us, is the same as it was 20 years ago,'' he added.
As the march ended, riot police clashed and fired tear gas at scores of anarchist youths in the latest sign of unrest in recession-hit European countries. Groups of youths vandalized banks and storefronts, hurling rocks, red paint and plastic bottles near parliament. Three people were arrested.
Windows were also smashed at the Finance Ministry's General Accounting Office, which has been accused by the European Union of faking statistics for years to hide Greece's dire situation.
Greece is considering tougher austerity measures to ward off a financial crisis that has undermined the euro currency used by 16 European nations. Its troubles have raised fears that financial market contagion will spread to other weak eurozone economies such as Portugal, Spain and Italy.
The pressure on the Greek government to deliver on its promise to rein in the country's borrowing levels ratcheted up further Wednesday with the news that Standard & Poor's, one of the three leading credit ratings agencies, could downgrade its rating on the country within a month.
And the EU statistics agency, Eurostat, said Greek national debt figures would be revised upward after it received explanation from Greece on a currency-swap deal with Goldman Sachs in 2001.
The U.S. bank says the transactions reduced Greece's debt by a total of euro2.37 billion. Greece's total debt is estimated euro300 billion in 2009.
The EU has issued a vague promise to support Greece, which has some euro53 billion ($72 billion) in debt coming due this year, but Prime Minister George Papandreou's new Socialist government has pressed for more specific guarantees to shore up market confidence.
Greece has already imposed broad spending cuts but says it is under pressure from the EU to cut salaries in the civil service. Unions say cutting Greeks' so-called 14th salary — part of annual pay held back as a holiday bonus — for public workers would be taken as ``an act of war.''
``If all these measures are enforced, unemployment will skyrocket. Our country will enter a massive recession and unemployment will reach a Europe-wide record,'' union spokesman Stathis Anestis said. ``This will be tragic because it will provoke social (unrest) and clashes.''
Officials from the EU and International Monetary Fund are in Athens to inspect public finances, ahead of a March 16 deadline to show signs of fiscal improvement or face imposed additional austerity measures.
Greece has promised the EU it will reduce the bloated budget deficit from 12.7 percent of gross domestic product to 8.7 percent this year. The country's woes have caused the euro to sink against the dollar and hiked the country's borrowing costs.
Greek unemployment hit a five-year high of 10.6 percent in November 2009, up from 9.8 percent in October.
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