Police fired stun grenades and tear gas at protesters yesterday as
tens of thousands poured into the streets of Athens as part of a
nationwide strike to challenge a new round of austerity measures that
are expected to cut wages, pensions and healthcare once again.
Dozens of youths, some masking their faces with helmets and T-shirts,
hurled Molotov cocktails and rocks at police who fired back in an
effort to scatter the angry crowds around the parliament building. More
than 50,000 people are believed to have participated in the mass
walk-out in Athens alone.
Hospital doctors, pensioners, teachers
and shopkeepers were among the demonstrators that participated in over
60 rallies throughout the debt-ridden country. Even the president of
Greece's police officers participated in the trade union march in Athens
alongside uniformed colleagues from the fire department and coastguard.
"We
don't owe [money] to anyone, bring back what's stolen," was one of the
chants that could be heard in Athens, echoing the violent resentment of
many Greeks against politicians and their purported embroilment in tax
evasion and corruption scandals.
Evangelos Meimarakis, the
Parliament Speaker and previous conservative New Democracy minister,
temporarily suspended his duties earlier this week after allegations of
money laundering. The Finance Ministry's Fraud squad is investigating at
least 30 politicians and public workers for possible corruption
charges, including two other former conservative ministers. All three
former ministers deny the accusations.
Meanwhile, the government
has been negotiating with its political allies and international lenders
to hammer out a minimum of €11.6bn (£9.2bn) worth of cuts mainly drawn
from pensions and wages. Cuts in healthcare and defence are also
planned. But delays in agreeing over the exact nature of the cuts is
holding up the disbursement of a critical €31.5bn (£25bn) loan
instalment that will help Greece stay afloat and inject cash into the
economy.
A Finance Ministry official told The Independent that
€23.5bn (£18.7bn) of the anticipated tranche has been earmarked to
recapitalise banks that have been unable to approve loans, paralysing
the system. Part of the rest will also be used to repay some of the
state's debt to private contractors and other organisations.
Giorgos
Loukas, a former electrician, said austerity measures had reduced his
monthly pension from €1,100 (£875) to €750 (£600) . "We're being
stripped of everything we have," the 66-year old said. Both his wife and
daughter are unemployed, and all three survive on his income. "Where is
European solidarity? We're being insulted as a nation but I will never
beg at soup-kitchens for food – my dignity is all I have left."
Greece
has been told to implement a succession of spending cuts and structural
reforms in an effort to bring down its massive debt in exchange a
bailout of nearly €200bn (£160bn). But many experts warn that the
measures are only making the recession deeper. One in two youths is out
of a job while thousands of educated and skilled professionals are
fleeing the country in search of opportunities abroad.
"I feel my
country is on auction and we're just an economic experiment," said
Dimitris Palles, 49, a physics researcher at the National Hellenic
Research Foundation. Mr Palles, 49, who's seen his annual salary drop
from €24,000 (£19,000) to €19,500 (£15,500). "No level of political
mismanagement can justify the pain we're being asked to endure," he
says.
Greece's international creditors were also reported to be
loggerheads yesterday over how to solve Athens' debt crisis, as the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) demanded that European governments
write off some of the Greek debt they hold. According to Reuters,
tensions between Greece and the "troika" of European Union, European
Central Bank and IMF have escalated as the IMF pushes to restructure
Greek debts to public-sector foreign creditors, whereas EU leaders would
rather give Athens more time to meet the demands of its bailout.
Public
healthcare is one of the sectors that has been gravely affected by the
crisis in Greece. Chemists and pharmaceutical companies have stopped
giving drugs on credit to medical insurers saying they haven't been paid
in months by the state.
Meanwhile, Greece's power company cut the
electricity at a kidney hospital on the island of Aegina for several
hours on Tuesday while the patients were undergoing blood dialysis,
forcing the centre to rely on its generator.
ECONOMY FEARS SEND SPAIN'S RATES SOARING
Concern
about the Spanish economy drove a sharp rise in the interest rates that
investors charge to lend money to Madrid yesterday, increasing fears
that eurozone crisis was worsening
The yield on the country's
10-year bonds topped 6 per cent for the first time since early this
month, reviving speculation that Madrid would have to seek a national
bailout from its European partners.
The high rates come in a
crucial week for the Spanish economy, with the government due to unveil
its draft budget for 2013 today, and an audit of Spain's banks expected
to reveal how much money will be needed to prop up the country's ailing
lenders on Friday.
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