Protest of the day

Posted: 11 February 2012 in Uncategorized
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According to Helena Smith, Greece is headed for a social explosion:

Politicians, almost without exception, believe they are “damned if they do and damned if they don’t”.

After more than two decades reporting from Athens, I can only concur. For the truth – as unpalatable as it may be for the IMF, EU and European Central Bank, Greece’s “troika” of creditors – is that, far from plugging the country’s budget black holes, the harsh austerity pursued in the name of deficit-reducing goals has pushed it towards economic and social collapse. Relentless wage and pension cuts, tax rises and cost-cutting reforms have left the country a shadow of itself. In its fifth successive year of recession, Greece is a hollowed-out version of what it once was, coming apart at the seams a little more with each day. Men and women forage through rubbish bins late at night. More sleep on the streets. Last week as Eurostat, the European statistic agency, announced that poverty had engulfed more than a third of the nation, it was revealed that unemployment had also exceeded one million people, from a record 19% to 20.9% in one month. . .

Ferment on the street is back. The clashes during last week’s second general strike are generally expected to be a prelude to something much more ominous. “There is going to be a huge social eruption,” said Apostalia Kiroudi, an unemployed jeweller shouting herself hoarse in front of parliament.

“Our politicians lied to us. They never told us the truth, and now they want to pass policies that they have no mandate to do. As that sign says over there,” she said, pointing to a friend holding a placard, “We choose to be free. Keep your money.” But that was one of the milder slogans.

Unlike two years ago, when the angry graffiti demanded that the “IMF go home” and “reject austerity” it now exhorts protesters to “murder bankers” and “rise in rebellion” and “never be slaves”. The spirit of resistance shows no sign of abating.

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