3 Bankers dead as anti-austerity riots erupt in Athens

http://news.yahoo.com/nphotos/Molotov-cocktail/photo//100505/481/ur...



ATHENS, Greece – Riots over harsh new austerity measures left three bank workers dead and engulfed the streets of Athens on Wednesday, as angry protesters tried to storm parliament, hurled Molotov cocktails at police and torched buildings. Police responded
with barrages of tear gas.

Tens of thousands of people took to the streets in a nationwide strike to protest new taxes and government spending cuts demanded by the International Monetary
Fund and other European nations before heavily indebted Greece gets a euro110 billion ($141 billion) loan package to keep it from defaulting.

The three bank workers — a man and two women — died after demonstrators set their bank on fire along the main demonstration route in central
Athens. As their colleagues sobbed in the street, five other bank
workers were rescued from the balcony of the burning building.

"A demonstration is one thing and murder is quite another!" Prime Minister George Papandreou thundered in Parliament during a session to discuss the spending cuts he announced Sunday — measures even the IMF has called draconian. Lawmakers held a minute of
silence for the dead — the first deaths during a protest in Greece
since 1991.

"We are all concerned by Greece's economic and budgetary situation but at this time our thoughts are with the human victims in Athens," European Union President Herman Van Rompuy said in Brussels.



A senior fire department official said demonstrators prevented firefighters from reaching the burning building, costing them vital time.

"Several crucial minutes were lost," the official said, visibly upset. "If we had intervened earlier, the loss of life could have been prevented."

He asked not to be identified pending an official announcement.

In Berlin, German Chancellor Angela Merkel called the Greek bailout critical for all of Europe.

"Nothing less than the future of Europe, and with that the future of Germany in Europe, is at stake," Merkel told lawmakers in Berlin, urging them to quickly pass the country's share of the bailout — euro22 billion ($28 billion)
over three years — by Friday. "We are at a fork in the road."

Greece faces a May 19 due date on debt it says it can't repay without the help.

In Brussels, European Union officials desperately tried to calm market fears that Greece's debt crisis was spreading to the rest of Europe, insisting it was a "unique case"
combining profligacy and tampered accounts. Van Rompuy insisted the
growing debt problems in Spain and Portugal had "absolutely nothing to do with the situation in Greece."

"Greece is a unique and particular case in the EU" because of its "precarious debt dynamics" and because it "has cheated with its statistics for
years and years," EU Commissioner Olli Rehn said.

But Moody's Investor Services, a major ratings agency, put Portugal's bond rating on review for possible downgrade Wednesday. Spanish and
Portuguese bonds and stocks slumped further on the news, reflecting
fears that they may also have trouble repaying their debt and that the
eurozone would have to extend even larger bailouts to them.

On the streets of Athens, demonstrators chanted "Thieves, thieves!" as they attempted to break through a riot police cordon guarding Parliament and chased ceremonial guards away from the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in front of the building.

Tear gas drifted across the city center as rioters hurled paving stones and fire bombs at police. Firefighters extinguished blazes at least two
buildings — the bank and a branch of the Finance Ministry — while protesters set up burning barricades and torched cars and a fire truck.

Police said 12 people were injured in the riots.

The marches came amid a 24-hour nationwide general strike that grounded all flights to and from Greece, shut down ports, schools and government services, and left hospitals working with emergency
medical staff. The Acropolis and all other ancient sites were closed
and journalists also walked off the job, suspending television and
radio news broadcasts.

But media later broke the strike to report on the deaths and the protests.

Violence also broke out in the northern city of Thessaloniki, where another 20,000 people marched through the city center and some youths smashed store windows.

Union reaction over austerity measures until now had been relatively muted by Greece's volatile standards, despite several previous strikes. But anger mounted after Papandreou announced cuts in
salaries and pensions for civil servants and another round of consumer tax increases.

Papandreou said he has no choice but to implement the measures if Greece was to avoid bankruptcy.

"There was only one other solution — for the country to default, taking the citizenry with it. And that would not have affected the rich, it
would have affected workers and pensioners," he told Parliament on Wednesday. "That was a real possibility, however nightmarish."

Under the bailout package, Greece will receive loans over three years from the IMF and the other 15 countries who share the euro currency.
The rescue aims to prevent Athens' debt troubles from becoming a wider
crisis for the euro.

But the rioting underlined skepticism that the Greek government could keep up its end of the bargain, helping drive the euro below $1.29 for the first time in over a year.

Even with the bailout, many economists think Greece will eventually default on or restructure its debts because its prospects for economic growth are so poor over the next several years, hurting
government revenue. Some fear the austerity measures insisted upon by
the EU and IMF could make prospects for growth even worse.

Unions say low-income Greeks will suffer disproportionately from the latest austerity measures, which aim to save euro30 billion ($40 billion) — the country's current budget deficit — through 2012.

"These people are losing their rights, they are losing their future," said Yiannis Panagopoulos, head of GSEE, one of the two largest unions.
"The country cannot surrender without a fight."

IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn warned that the crisis could spread to other countries despite the rescue package's efforts to contain it.

"Everyone must remain extremely vigilant" to this risk, Strauss-Kahn said in an interview in French newspaper Le Parisien Wednesday.

"I completely understand the Greek populations' anger, its incomprehension at the size of the economic catastrophe," Strauss-Kahn said. But, he said, Greeks must also understand that without these
measures "the situation would be infinitely more serious."

The draft bill of the new austerity measures is to be voted on Thursday. Papandreou's Socialists hold a comfortable majority of 160 in the 300-seat Parliament and the bill is expected to pass easily.

Views: 50

Reply to This

"Destroying the New World Order"

TOP CONTENT THIS WEEK

THANK YOU FOR SUPPORTING THE SITE!

mobile page

12160.info/m

12160 Administrators

 

Latest Activity

tjdavis favorited Doc Vega's blog post Welcome Back to the Hive
16 hours ago
tjdavis posted a video

"The Chinese thought it was an elaborate joke" | Helen Joyce

John and Helen discuss why transgenderism and gender theory are a Western phenomenon.Helen Joyce was Britain Editor at The Economist, where she worked for ov...
17 hours ago
Doc Vega posted blog posts
18 hours ago
Less Prone commented on tjdavis's photo
Thumbnail

iconism

"Germany remains a country under military occupation by its conqueror. US has 21 military bases and…"
18 hours ago
Larry Harmen's 2 blog posts were featured
19 hours ago
Doc Vega's 5 blog posts were featured
19 hours ago
cheeki kea's blog post was featured

Dr. Aseem Malhotra's Explosive Court Testimony on COVID "Vaccines"(UPDATED)

 Doctor Malhotra drops arsenal of truth bombs on Helsinki. A spectacular display. Here are few snip…See More
19 hours ago
FREEDOMROX's blog post was featured
19 hours ago
cheeki kea commented on Less Prone's photo
Thumbnail

Famine or War What Would it Be

"I think it will be famine for some and war for others. "
22 hours ago
cheeki kea commented on Sandy's photo
Thumbnail

FB_IMG_1710523455761

"Burbia is correct. The Tik of the litter is successful in gorging itself at the information/media…"
23 hours ago
Less Prone posted a video

How the Government Uses Fear-Mongering to Alter Your Brain

Unlock the full interview here: https://bit.ly/3RCq6ccMolecular geneticist and immunologist Dr. Michael Nehls tells Tucker Carlson how fear-mongering is used...
yesterday
Doc Vega posted a photo

main-qimg-5806e1adb3109cf42e236b6063e7e3ec

The cowardly murderous Democrats out to destroy America.
yesterday
Sandy posted videos
yesterday
Burbia commented on Sandy's photo
Thumbnail

FB_IMG_1710523455761

"Is that the narrative now? Its more like Tik Tok influenced the younger generation to not be…"
Friday
Burbia commented on Less Prone's photo
Thumbnail

Rebuilding Khazaria

"Who exactly are these beings? They violently push their way into the Middle East claiming it their…"
Friday
Less Prone posted a photo

Famine or War What Would it Be

How far are these monsters allowed to go?
Thursday
Less Prone favorited cheeki kea's blog post The saddest post I've ever read. ( vaccine victim speaks out. )
Thursday
Less Prone commented on cheeki kea's blog post The saddest post I've ever read. ( vaccine victim speaks out. )
"It's so cruel and unfair. So many innocent people fell for it and even now the wictims are…"
Thursday
Doc Vega commented on truth's video
Thumbnail

MSM Admits US Funding Al-Qaeda & Taliban Terror Attacks

"In all likelihood if the MSM comes up with an explanation it's probably pure unadulterated…"
Thursday
Doc Vega commented on truth's video
Thumbnail

MSM Admits US Funding Al-Qaeda & Taliban Terror Attacks

"Mark Levin talks about all the front groups funded by Soros that have provided revenue for the…"
Thursday

© 2024   Created by truth.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service

content and site copyright 12160.info 2007-2019 - all rights reserved. unless otherwise noted