The Prince George Citizen

Protests shatter financial calm in Europe

- Elena BECATOROS

ATHENS — Europe’s fragile financial calm was shattered Wednesday as investors worried that violent anti-austerity protests in Greece and Spain’s debt troubles showed that the region still cannot get a grip on its financial crisis and stabilize its common currency, the euro.

Police fired tear gas at rioters hurling gasoline bombs and chunks of marble Wednesday during Greece’s largest anti-austerity demonstrat­ion in six months – part of a 24-hour general strike that was a test for the nearly fourmonth old coalition government and the new spending cuts it plans to push through.

The brief but intense clashes by a couple of hundred rioters participat­ing in the demonstrat­ion of more than 60,000 people came a day after anti-austerity protests rocked the Spanish capital, Madrid.

Hundreds of Spanish anti-austerity protesters gathered again Wednesday, ending near parliament in Madrid amid a heavy presence of riot police. In Tuesday’s protest, police arrested 38 people and 64 were injured.

Spain’s central bank warned Wednesday the country’s economy continues to shrink “significan­tly,” sending Spanish stock index tumbling and its borrowing costs rising.

Across Europe, stock markets fell as well. Germany’s DAX dropped two per cent while the CAC-40 in France fell 2.4 per cent and Britain’s FTSE 100 slid 1.4 per cent. The euro was also hit, down a further 0.3 per cent at $1.2840.

The turmoil Wednesday ended weeks of relative calm and optimism among investors that Europe and the 17 countries that use the euro might have turned a corner. Markets have been breathing easier since the European Central Bank said earlier this month it would buy unlimited amounts of government bonds to help countries with their debts.

The move by the ECB helped lower borrowing costs for indebted government­s from levels that only two months ago threatened to bankrupt Spain and Italy.

Stocks also rose. Media speculatio­n about the timing and cost of a eurozone breakup or a departure by troubled Greece faded.

However, the economic reality in Europe remained dire. Several countries have had to impose harsh new spending cuts, tax rises and economic reforms to meet European deficit targets and, in Greece’s case, to continue getting vital aid.

The austerity has hit the countries’ population­s with cut wages and axed services, and left their economies struggling through recessions as reduced government spending has undermined growth.

“Yesterday’s anti-austerity protests in Madrid, together with today’s 24-hour strike in Greece, are both reminders that rampant unemployme­nt and a general collapse in living standards make people desperate and angry,” said David Morrison, senior market strategist at GFT Markets.

“There are growing concerns that the situation across the eurozone is set to take a turn for the worse.”

Shortly before Greece’s strike got under way, Prime Minister Antonis Samaras and Finance Minister Yannis Stournaras hammered out a C11.5 billion ($14.87 billion) package of spending cuts for 2013-14 demanded by the country’s internatio­nal lenders, along with another C2 billion in improved tax collection.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? TORONTO (CP) — Some employees of short-haul carrier Porter Airlines are now unionized. The Canadian Office and Profession­al Employees Union says 21 Porter workers have joined the 35,000-member union. COPE says they’re the only Porter employees in...
AP PHOTO TORONTO (CP) — Some employees of short-haul carrier Porter Airlines are now unionized. The Canadian Office and Profession­al Employees Union says 21 Porter workers have joined the 35,000-member union. COPE says they’re the only Porter employees in...
 ?? AP PHOTO ?? A protester holds a poster comparing Nazi leader Adolf Hitler and German Chancellor Angela Merkel during a nationwide general strike in Athens on Wednesday. Writing on the poster reads: “Boycott German products. Resist the Fourth Reich.”
AP PHOTO A protester holds a poster comparing Nazi leader Adolf Hitler and German Chancellor Angela Merkel during a nationwide general strike in Athens on Wednesday. Writing on the poster reads: “Boycott German products. Resist the Fourth Reich.”

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