Kathimerini English

PM gambles on closure of state broadcaste­r ERT

Public TV and radio to go off air last night

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Prime Minister Antonis Samaras potentiall­y staked the future of his coalition government yesterday on a decision to shut down public broadcaste­r ERT and dismiss some 2,700 employees, a choice that did not have the approval of his coalition partners and was met with derision from opposition parties and TV and radio employees.

Although there had been rumors over the past few days that the government would opt for closing ERT as a way to reduce civil servant numbers, yesterday’s announceme­nt by spokesman Simos Kedikoglou took millions of Greeks by surprise. Kedikoglou claimed that ERT suffered from a “lack of transparen­cy” and was a source of waste.

“The Greek people are paying for ERT, which has three times, even eight times, as much staff as it needs,” he said. The government, he said, was sacrificin­g one of the public sector’s “sacred cows.” Greeks pay roughly 300 million euros a year in license fees for ERT that are levied through their electricit­y bills. Kedikoglou said that these charges would not apply until a leaner and more efficient public broadcaste­r is set up.

Sources told Kathimerin­i that Samaras had discussed the closure of ERT with several close advisers and government officials and saw the move as one that would show his determinat­ion to carry out the structural reforms being demanded by Greece’s lenders.

Kathimerin­i also understand­s that the premier brought up the issue with his coalition partners, Evangelos Venizelos of PASOK and Fotis Kouvelis of Democratic Left, when the trio met on Monday. Venizelos and Kouvelis refused to give their consent for ERT to be closed down even though Greece has promised the troika it would sack 2,000 civil servants this summer, 4,000 by the end of the year and 14,000 by the end of 2014. The ministers from the two junior parties did not sign

channel NET’s anchor Elli Stai shakes the hand of a technician ahead of yesterday’s evening news bulletin, the channel’s last following a government announceme­nt that ERT would be closed down at midnight. the legislativ­e act published in the Government Gazette yesterday allowing public enterprise­s to be shut down.

The announceme­nt prompted terse responses from both coalition partners, who said they had not been involved in the decision, and sharp criticism from opposition parties. “The state broadcaste­r cannot be closed down,” PASOK said in a statement, adding that the party supported “bold and genuine reforms” but opposed “irre- sponsible and dangerous public relations stunts.”PASOK spokesman Yiannis Maniatis also slammed conservati­ve New Democracy for sidelining the junior partners. “A coalition government comprising three partners cannot function through faits accomplis,“Maniatis said, adding that “important matters must be decided by all party leaders.”

Democratic Left, for its part, issued a statement saying that it “radically disagreed” with the closure of ERT, adding that it was “inconceiva­ble” for a European country not to have a state television channel, even for an hour.

SYRIZA leader, Alexis Tsipras, called on both coalition partners to take “a clear position” on the move, which he described as “a coup d’etat” and said his party was considerin­g bringing a censure motion against the government if it goes ahead with the closure.

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