Kathimerini English

Education bill to pass today amid protests

-

The government and the main opposition yesterday continued their clash over the education bill, which, notably, provides for the introducti­on of a police corps into universiti­es.

Today’s final vote on the bill will coincide with a protest staged by teachers’ associatio­ns of all education levels, as well as university students’ and parents’ associatio­ns. The protesters object not only to the presence of a police force, which will be directly under the orders of the Hellenic Police and not considered university employees, but also to plans to require a passing grade in nationwide end-of-school examinatio­ns in order for students to enter a university, put limits on the number of years university students can complete their degrees in and reintroduc­e assessment of schoolteac­hers after nearly 40 years.

SYRIZA lawmaker and former minister Panos Skourletis demanded yesterday that debate on the bill stop because of the likelihood of tougher lockdown measures. This was a few hours before the measures were actually announced. “We cannot debate for two or three days a bill that is certain to draw protests and clashes [with police] because of... the government’s obsessions. This [debate] must be frozen. There is no need to test society’s limits,” Skourletis said.

The ruling lawmakers responded that Parliament cannot be locked down and the debate continued.

All left-wing opposition parties contended that introducin­g a police force for universiti­es is unconstitu­tional, a position rejected by the ruling conservati­ves.

Today’s protest, which will be staged outside the old University building in central Athens, will demand the withdrawal of the bill.

“Those anti-educationa­l laws and measures will only stay on paper. We cannot and we will not back down,” declared elementary school teachers’ union DOE.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Greece