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Greeks Strike, Clash with Police over Austerity
ATHENS - Stone-throwing Greeks clashed with police and tens of thousands of protesters marched on parliament on Wednesday to oppose government efforts to pass new austerity measures for the debt-stricken euro zone state.
A female demonstrator confronts riot police near the Greek parliament in Athens, June 15, 2011.
(Credit: REUTERS/Pascal Rossignol) Unions representing half the five-million-strong workforce also launched a nationwide strike, shutting ports, schools and other basic services in the Mediterranean state.
Prime Minister George Papandreou must push through a new five-year campaign of tax hikes, spending cuts and sell-offs of state property to continue receiving aid from the European Union and International Monetary Fund and avoid default.
He not only faces public protests and resistance from a conservative opposition that has surpassed his Socialist party in opinion polls, but a few backbenchers in his own parliamentary grouping are also threatening to reject the plan.
Political analysts said he would be able to push through the package with support from his PASOK party and possibly a handful of opposition deputies, but that protests had introduced some uncertainty. One PASOK deputy defected on Tuesday, reducing the party's number of seats in parliament to 155 out of 300.
Thousands of activists and unionists converged on the central Syntagma square on the parliament's front steps to try to stop lawmakers from entering to debate the bill they hope to pass by the end of the month.
"Thieves, traitors!" many chanted. "Where did the money go?"
"These measures are not taking us anywhere. They only lead to unemployment, hunger and poverty," said Panayotis Dounis a 60-year-old pensioner. "We wouldn't be here if the politicians had made sacrifices as well. We are absolutely disappointed."
About 1,500 police closed a large part of the city center and erected two-meter metal barricades in front of the assembly, creating a corridor to hold back protesters as lawmakers drove up to the building in official limousines.
Riot police fired several rounds of tear gas at dozens of masked youths who pelted them with rocks and a few petrol bombs. Several activists also hurled oranges at Papandreou's car as he drove past, a police official said.
Several groups in the protest clashed between themselves. Police said one person was injured and they detained 40 people.
"CRUEL AS A TIGER"
The new austerity package foresees 6.5 billion euros ($9.4 billion) in tax hikes and spending cuts this year, doubling measures agreed with bailout lenders that have pushed unemployment to a record 16.2 percent and extended a deep recession into its third year.
The plan includes: new luxury taxes; a crackdown on tax evasion; tax hikes on soft-drinks, swimming pools, restaurant bills and real estate; and cutting the Mediterranean state's 750,000-strong public work force by a fifth.
With those and other measures worth total savings of 28 billion euros through 2015, it also aims to raise 50 billion euros by selling off state-owned firms.
Papandreou appealed for national consensus on the laws, on which hang the EU and IMF release of a further 12 billion euros in aid next month that Athens needs to pay off maturing debt or face default.
"We are at a historically crucial moment ... and I believe that national consensus is important for the country's interest," Papandreou told President Karolos Papoulias during a meeting. "We will proceed with the responsibility for the necessary decisions to see the country exit the crisis."
Papandreou was planning to talk to party leaders later on Wednesday and then make a statement, a government official said.
On Tuesday, euro zone finance ministers failed to reach agreement on how private holders of Greek debt should share the cost of a new bailout for Athens worth an estimated 120 billion euros before a June 23-24 summit.
The European Central Bank opposes such a move, saying that if such participation is involuntary it could be deemed default that could shock markets and put weaker euro states at risk.
The lack of agreement pushed the cost of insuring Greek debt against default to a new record high on Wednesday, while shares in Greek banks fell 7 percent on fears of political uncertainty.
The PASOK deputy who defected said he could not back the package. "You have to be as cruel as a tiger to vote for these measures. I am not," George Lianis said in a letter to Parliament Speaker Filippos Petsalnikos on Tuesday.
Another PASOK member said he would vote against it. But analysts said the party, which still holds a majority, would pass the package by the end of the month before working on another set of laws on how to implement it.
"My gut feeling is that at the end of the day they will get enough MPs... I'd say there is a 70 percent chance that it will go through," said Diego Iscaro, IHS Global Insight.
"The other option (voting it down) would be quite destabilizing. That will drive MPs to vote for it."
The cabinet is also expected to survive the turmoil in the short term. A poll on Sunday showed 62 percent of Greeks expect the government to call early elections before its term ends in 2013, although 59 percent thought they did not need a vote now.
(Additional reporting by Yannis Behrakis, Ingrid Melander, Harry Papachristou and Yiorgos Karahalis; Writing by Michael Winfrey; editing by Mark Heinrich and Elizabeth Piper)

68 Comments so far
Show AllIt is obvious that bankers are not Christians....Forgive our debts as we forgive our debtors and lead us not into temptation (time payments).
The Bible refers to a Jubilee ever forty-nine years when all debts were to be forgiven. (It also forbid lending to their fellows at interest.) Thomas Paine wrote about our forefathers being the subjects of inherited wealth - the Crown of England. The peoples of the world have been enslaved by debts created before they were even born. Our children and grand children will be expected to pay tribute in perpetuity. They will see no part of the money borrowed, (or extorted from their heirs), only a permanent deduction from their standard of living. This is indentured servitude - a subtle form of slavery. Time to shake the shackles slapped on us at birth. Time to bring true freedom to the world. It has become self-evident that all men are not created equal when a few are born with trust funds and no cares in life. Where the majority spend a life of toil to supply said trust funds with their income for eternity. It's good to be a god!
Time for world wide selective default. The Greek's know the stories of Lycurgus and Solon.
Class War Now!
“There's class warfare, all right,” Mr. Buffett said, “but it's my class, the rich class, that's making war, and we're winning.”
NYT - 11/26/06 (http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/26/business/yourmoney/26every.html)
You err when you assume that I am unaware of the "misguided, victimized Republican workers."
Although I abhor their reactionary politics, I prefer them to misguided, pwogwessive, bourgeiosie liberals. I catch a lot of flak for that around here.
Yes your assertion about national union leadership has some merit, but I'm against abandoning the unions. Instead I prefer to try to install new leadership
I like wsws.org. I also think that without a working class party, tarde unionism in the US will continue to wilt.
It's good to have a small country, if our homless and jobless started walking now most wouldn't arrive in Washington till fall. Too hungry to do much except collapse on the lawn. Meanwhile Obombs silent drones would look for signs of life, to end. >^^<
Who Bombs?
Obama Bombs!
Class war is already happening. It's just that the working class is mostly unorganized, unaware or just not fighting back.
Capitalism invariably leads to monoploies and oligarchy.
The jublee is an old Jewish tradition, maybe time to revise it,,,,,,,,, naw lol! >^^<
They wore black, waved the black-and-red flag, and clashed with the police? Tsk-tsk. All those thousands of angry Greeks must all be undercover agent-provocoteurs. That is what a US liberal would say.
ive been guilty of saying that in the past. It is sometimes a fine balancing act of trying to get more of the population on your side or getting stomped by police for the Xth time. To be frank the first reaction i had when i saw pics of the greek protesters wielding batons was "good for them". After 10 years of witnessing cops break up peaceful protests, i understand this type of reaction vs cops more. Where it will lead us, when corporate media will try to spin self-defense into fear mongering, future will tell.
Some "Greek Socialissts" these are in power. Hell! These jackasses are much like Blairite Labor in power in London. Who needs "these socialists" doing the bidding of the European Central Bank and the Intermational Monetary Fund and the rest of financial robber barons.
Some "Greek Socialissts" these are in power. Hell! These jackasses are much like Blairite Labor in power in London. Who needs "these socialists" doing the bidding of the European Central Bank and the Intermational Monetary Fund and the rest of financial robber barons.
Correct. The Greeks need to purge their socialist party of the bankster lackeys.
Exactly! We must never waiver from our dogmatic stance of nonviolence at any cost!! It makes no difference whatsoever if nonviolence is effective (which it obviously is not), the important thing is that we emphasize our nonviolence above any other message and quickly denounce those who engage in confrontational tactics as agent provocateurs... Unless of course we are talking about protesters in Greece or the Middle East (or American protests that happened in the past), in which case, violence is legitimate, acceptable and even admirable.
No double standard here!
Good for the Greek people. Now if only the U.S. working class would collectively rise up against the fascist bastards in Washington bent on enacting austerity measures here while the elite running the show get more tax cuts.
Agreed, but we better plan on dealing with a militarized police response that will make the Greek cops look downright gentle.
I think the US gov'ts response to meaningful, powerful mass protest will resemble Quadaffi's.
You are absolutely correct joe. Remember, the North American Divison of the U.S. Army is now in existence, awaiting its mobilization at the President's word to "deal with civil unrest" (i.e., dissenters, or the masses rising up against the government in protest). Bye-bye Posse Comitatus Act.
The FBI has just been given new powers to recruit spies on activist and union citizens without any restraints.
They are afraid what is happening in the world and in Madison will happen all over the USA.
The revolution is being televised.
There is no "must" that Papandreou needs to perform. There is another alternative, one Reuters will never mention as it's in the service of the Banksters pushing Financial Fascism. Again, I urge folks not aware to read Dr. Hudson's 4 most recent essays at his site, http://michael-hudson.com/
What the Greek people want their government to do is to say NO! to the ECB and its Financial Fascists in the same manner Icelanders did recently. The story is the same for Ireland, Spain and Portugal, and it would be the same for the UK had it joined the Eurozone. And the same forces are behind the moves of Walker and his kin within the USA. And as I mentioned yesterday, Obama is one of them too.
The First Anti-Fascist War provided the conditions for the Financial Fascists within the Money Power to gain control which has increased until we now have the Second Anti-Fascist War that is every bit as deadly for the various sovereign states under attack as during the previous War. If you think my words hyperbole, then read the essays at the link above and try to argue I'm wrong.
karlof1,
I don't need to read your essay to know you are not wrong.
But the "Hyperbole" question you ask I will differ a little.
Dr Hudson does not use the "Fascist" term at all.
This is worse than fascist, it is SERFDOM for the citizens of the world.
He writes:
"The financial road to serfdom
Financial lobbyists are turning the English language – and economic terminology throughout the world – into a battlefield. Creditors are to be permitted to take the assets of insolvent debtors – from homeowners and companies to entire nations – as if this were a normal working of “the market” and foreclosure was simply a way to restore “liquidity.” As for “solvency,” the ECB would strip Greece clean of its public sector’s assets. Bank officials have spoken of throwing potentially 150 billion euros of property onto the market."
So I just think that the battlefield of the language would be more effective for the people if we quite trying to scare folks into action with the old terms of Nazis, Fascists and the worn out Vichy meaning France under Hitler.
I feel it not only dates us but is not really what is happening now.
These forms were defeated as you note and they did not try to make serfs of it's citizens as long as they conquered and killed off and enslaved the opposition, while the majority of it's citizens went along with nationalist pride.
Just tryin to answer your good question and thanks for the essay it teaches us a lot.
Thanks for your well thought reply, Jim. As I acknowleged in a previous thread some weeks ago, the Financial Fascism term is mine and not Hudson's; and the Vichey reference is Alan MacDonald's, for those following along. Yes, my use of the term outs me as an historian able to holisticly visualize a rather long sequence of events and its various actors, and Hudson coined his term similarly with reasoning parallel to mine--he is attacking Hayek/Rand, their "junk economics" and associated philosophy.
I will pose a question: Is there any essential difference between a Prole and a Serf, between Wage Slavery and Debt Peonage? And what of the Authoritarian governing arrangement that enforces those conditions--essentially forced labor camps without watchtowers and barbed wire: Freindly Fascism or Inverted Totalitarianism? Are the use of such terms really scare tactics or acurate descriptions of reality meant to inform and enlighten?
There's more to discuss, but the above is a good start. And more commentary by others is quite welcomed.
I just think that Fascism is not as accurate as modern Serfdom and sounds like dated terminology and hyperbole to most of the youth or even many who were persecuted by the Nazis.
I think this goes beyond a historical World War Two comparison.
This is more scary than World War Two when the Fascists also known as National Socialists were defeated in less than a decade... this is now!
This will not be defeated by another War. War is how this is growing.
This is a long term problem and a world revolution is already happening to deal with it.
You are free to disagree with my strong opinions so maybe we can agree to disagree on this little point... I don't like to argue over words but you were the one to ask about "Hyperbole" when to me, this never ending War Economy is worse than fascist now and in the future.
You and others can have the last word since you brought up the question and I said my piece.
Peace
Thanks again, Jim, for your reply. You're reasoning that it's scarier because it's now is correct, whereas I see it as a process with a long continuity--both are equally scary. The question I've been trying to answer for almost a decade now is how do we defeat the forces arrayed against us without resorting to violence. And we must also have an articulated vision of what we'd install once we gain victory, which is of course far easier than fighting the battles. As mentioned above, the Argentinian model has promise. I posed my series of questions because you brought up a valid point; and I don't wish to "argue over words," but would like to understand how you relate to them because words convey knowledge and can be powerful/influential.
Agreed, much of the left is way to fascinated by intellectualism and verbal cleverness.
They could learn from the alcoholics, "Keep it Simple."
Okay then, please provide an example of your simpleness.
As an organizer, I am frequently called upon to boil complex situations down to their most basic points.
On this site, complicated terminology and debate are important, but for the work of organizing large groups, simple works best.
How's that for simple?
So, your call below for "Class War Now" is your example of simple?
Yeah that's pretty simple to understand.
Also the class war is well underway, but the masees are basically immobilized and defenseless.
And I've had enough of your Socratic method karloff1.
two choices - to the bondholders - and the issuers - JAIL or take a HAIRCUT -
sorta like that scene in "Casino"... and they catch the two players reading the dealer's hand from another table and communicating with a little teletype gadget...
they cattle prod the first guy... take him in the kitchen... the one "tapping out" the cards... smash his hand a few times with a hammer... then fire up a circular saw...
then they intercept the "reciever"... the winner at the other table at the chip cash window... bring him in the kitchen and give him a choice...
same deal as the frist guy... or leave with no money...
simple enough? bankers like to take risks - right? how about a little consequences?
michael hudson... been reading him for years... EXCELLENT... one of the few canaries in the mine... even had an e-mail exchange with him and his wife when this whole housing thing started...
I was watching a repeat on Frontline last night on how they had warning, clear back in the Clinton administration!! Jail's too good for them! Give'em haircuts at the neck!
>^^<
Please explain how framing differs from semantics.
karlof1, I have Dr. Hudson's article and agree 100% with both of you that it is exactly what Greece, Spain, Portugal, and Ireland must do.
The US Empire's situation is different because it has its own central bank, its debt is monetized in its own currency, and its economic surplus is more than enough to carry the current amount of government debt, which is not the same as the debt held by the various private banks. But except for North Dakota, the several states lack their own central bank capable of providing capital to the state treasury, which leaves them very vulnerable to attacks like Walker's contrived budget crisis. In 2008, a solid majority of the US citizenry did NOT want the Banksters bailed out, and their failure would NOT have harmed the overall US economy. Indeed, their removal from the scene would have created a much needed political vacuum as the main honey pot for politicos would have vanished, and an opportunity for genuine change ushered in. That the Financial Fascists had the power to force the government to bail them out against the well known desires of the public provided the proof for those of us watching that they had established essentially dictatorial control--control they continue to weild that impedes any effort to change course and face the massive problems confronting the nation and planet.
The Federal Reserve IS the US Empire's Central Bank, no matter how hard you try to deny it. Sorry.
The bailout is for the bankers, not the people.
IMF = rapists
Argentina's Kichner said "NO" to the IMF banksters, restructured the debt and the economy in general, and got the country going well again. The banksters screamed but couldn't stop it. That, and following Iceland, is the only future for the so-called PIGS countries.
Like Iceland that is what Greece and Ireland should both do.
The Greek Unions have known for years that the economic and financial policies of the successive Greek governments would eventually lead to a calamity for Greek workers even if there had not been an economic downturn in 2008 but refused to seize power and take responsibility. Barking at the existing powers sounds good but is useless.
>>The Greek Unions have known for years that the economic and financial policies of the successive Greek governments would eventually lead to a calamity <<
Just as USAmericans know that years of the economic and financial policies of the successive USAmerican governments will eventually lead to calamity. Will we show the intestinal fortitude of the Greeks when push comes to shove? I think we all know the answer to that one don't we?
Most of you bloggers seem to forget the massive debt was left by the previous RIGHT WING government of Greece. My how you Americans have a very short term memory.
Most of us have a hard time remembering how much debt our own government left us.
Greece is billions, ours is trillions... Math is not our strong point.
SIDEBAR:Some months ago I saw an article and videos about a street dog that frequently showed up at demonstrations in Athens - always on the side of the protesters. He didn't threaten anyone & the police had learned they could ignore him.
This morning I saw live coverage of the current demonstration in Athens. And there was that dog - right up front where the protesters and cops were pitching tear gas canisters back & forth.
Good puppy.
To couple this article by Reuters, and put all of the elements together succinctly, here's a more rounded perspective about Greece:
http://my.firedoglake.com/fairleft/2011/06/14/bankers-mug-greece-today-you-tomorrow/
ARES, I have extensive family members in Ireland. That they are mad as hell about how things have gone down, you can be assured. But, apparently the Celtic Tiger years were VERY good and it appears that by far, the majority of the Irish are doing A O K.
As others have noted, there is a significant difference between billions and trillions as far as debt goes; I see things as becoming MUCH worse here in the near term as compared to Ireland. Or maybe even Greece for that matter.
Having read many of your posts following your initial introduction, I would have to say that I do respect you point of view and presentation; it doesn't have to be "comfortable" for everybody! Cead mille na failte - 100,000 welcomes!
I salute the people of Greece. Make them; your would be government/oppressors eat eskata and die!
How is it that all these countries are in trouble, because they bailed out their banks and markets, and quickly the banks and markets are doing better and the citizens are expected to sacrifice even further while the banks and markets make off with the assets of their countries at firesale prices. Something is wrong with that picture. Grifters have a term for stupid people that fall for their games: "easy marks". We've all been tagged with that label and the behaviors of our governments prove them right. We've been swindled.