Cape Breton Post

Athens hit by riots

Clashes break out as Greek lawmakers debate contentiou­s austerity bill

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Rioters hurled petrol bombs at police who responded with tear gas as an anti-austerity demonstrat­ion outside parliament turned violent Wednesday, while Greek lawmakers began debating contentiou­s measures needed to start negotiatio­ns on a new bailout and avoid financial collapse.

Groups of youths among the more than 12,000 protesters smashed storefront­s and set at least one vehicle alight.

The clashes were the first significan­t protest violence since the left-wing Syriza government came to power in January promising to repeal bailout austerity. Police said at least 50 people were detained.

The protest was timed to coincide with the start of debate on the bill, which includes consumer tax increases and pension reforms that will condemn Greeks to years of more economic hardship.

The bill has fueled anger among the governing left-wing Syriza party and led to a revolt by many party members against Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, who has insisted the deal forged early Monday after a marathon weekend eurozone summit was the best he could do to prevent Greece from crashing out of Europe’s joint currency.

“I must tell you, that Monday morning at 9:30, it was the most difficult day of my life. It was a decision that will weigh on me for the rest of my life,” said Finance Minister Euclid Tsakalotos.

“I don’t know if we did the right thing. But I know we did some- thing with the sense that we had no choice. Nothing was certain and nothing is,” he said as the debate kicked off.

Civil servants protested with a 24-hour strike that disrupted public transport and shut down state-run services across the country.

Large numbers of Syriza lawmakers are almost certain to vote against the package, though the bill is expected to pass with support from pro-European opposition parties.

Alternate Finance Minister Nadia Valavani resigned from her post, saying she could not vote in favour of the bill.

In a letter she sent to Tsipras on Monday and released by the finance ministry Wednesday, Valavani said she believed “dominant circles in Germany” were intent on “the full humiliatio­n of the government and the country.”

The economy ministry’s secretary general, Manos Manousakis, also resigned over the agreement.

Tsipras agreed to a deal after a marathon 17-hour eurozone summit that ended Monday morning.

It calls for Greece to pass new austerity measures his left-wing government had long battled against in return for the start of negotiatio­ns on a third bailout worth about 85 billion euros ($93 billion) in loans over three years.

The government, a coalition between Syriza and the small right-wing Independen­t Greeks, holds 162 seats in Greece’s 300member parliament.

More than 30 of Syriza’s own lawmakers have publicly voiced objections.

Tsipras has acknowledg­ed the measures he agreed to go against his election pledges to repeal austerity, and described them in a Tuesday night television interview as “irrational.”

But he said he had no option if he was to prevent Greece’s financial collapse.

Tsipras has faced strident dissent even from top ministers, with Energy Minister Panagiotis Lafazanis saying in a post on his ministry’s website that the deal the prime minister reached was “unacceptab­le” and calling on him to withdraw it.

The civil servants’ strike disrupted public services. Pharmacies joined in with their own 24-hour strike to object to the austerity deal, which will allow some non-prescripti­on drugs to be sold by supermarke­ts.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? A riot policeman tries to avoid a petrol bomb thrown by anti-austerity protesters in Athens Wednesday.
AP PHOTO A riot policeman tries to avoid a petrol bomb thrown by anti-austerity protesters in Athens Wednesday.

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