Houston Chronicle

Protest in Greece over new law on demonstrat­ions turns violent

- By Derek Gatopoulos

ATHENS, Greece — Violence broke out here late Thursday during a mass demonstrat­ion against a new law to curb public protests, leaving six police officers injured. A group of protesters hurled gasoline bombs at riot police outside parliament, and police responded with tear gas and flash grenades.

Police said they arrested nine people and detained 15 others for questionin­g. Demonstrat­ions were held in Athens and dozens of other Greek cities and towns to oppose the plans by the center-right government.

The bill was approved by vote of 187-101 in parliament.

More than 10,000 protesters had gathered in central Athens, many supporting a labor union backed by the Greek Communist Party. A separate group of several dozen youths was involved in the violence that sent other demonstrat­ors, including families with young children, scrambling to move away from the clouds of tear gas.

Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis’ year-old conservati­ve government said it is determined to stop small protest gatherings from disrupting traffic and commercial activity.

“The right to hold peaceful gatherings must be protected. … But it must be done in a way that will not interrupt the activity of an entire city,” Mitsotakis told parliament on the second and final day of debate.

Critics of the proposed reforms include the Athens Bar Associatio­n and parliament’s own legislativ­e review committee. They argued that plans to prosecute protesters attending unsanction­ed rallies and to hold protest organizers responsibl­e for damage caused if rallies turn violent are legally troublesom­e.

The government said it added several clarificat­ions to the bill to address those concerns.

Opposition leader Alexis Tsipras, who was prime minister from 2015 to 2019, accused the government of introducin­g the measures to allow heavy-handed policing. He predicted the pandemic-driven recession would trigger large labor protests in the fall.

“You fear what is coming — the reaction of society, the anger of society — and that is why you are preparing to give us repression,” Tsipras told parliament.

Greece is expected to suffer a major recession this year because of the pandemic, losing 9 percent of its annual output, according to European Union projection­s.

 ?? Petros Giannakour­is / Associated Press ?? Riot police try to avoid gasoline bombs thrown by protesters in Athens during a demonstrat­ion against a new law to curb public protests. Six police officers were injured, and nine people were arrested.
Petros Giannakour­is / Associated Press Riot police try to avoid gasoline bombs thrown by protesters in Athens during a demonstrat­ion against a new law to curb public protests. Six police officers were injured, and nine people were arrested.

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