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    Greece passes new austerity deal amid rioting

    ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Greek lawmakers on Monday approved harsh new austerity measures demanded by bailout creditors to save the debt-crippled nation from bankruptcy, after riots in Athens and other cities left stores looted and burned and more than 120 people hurt.

    The historic vote paves the way for Greece's European partners and the International Monetary Fund to release $170 billion (euro130 billion) in new rescue loans, without which Greece would default on its mountain of debt next month and likely leave the eurozone — a scenario that would further roil global markets.

    Lawmakers voted 199-74 in favor of the cutbacks, despite strong dissent among the two main coalition members.

    In response, the Socialists and conservatives expelled 22 and 21 lawmakers, respectively, reducing their majority in the 300-seat parliament from 236 to 193.

    Violence was also reported in six other cities, the worst in central Volos where the town hall and a tax office were damaged by fire, police said.

    Sunday's clashes erupted after more than 100,000 protesters marched to the parliament to rally against the drastic cuts, which will ax one in five civil service jobs and slash the minimum wage by more than a fifth.

    At least 45 businesses were damaged by fire, including several historic buildings, movie theaters, banks and a cafeteria, in the worst riot damage in Athens in years. Fifty police officers were injured and at least 70 protesters were hospitalized. Sixth-seven suspected rioters were arrested and a further 70 detained.

    Prime Minister Lucas Papademos urged calm.

    "Vandalism and destruction have no place in a democracy and will not be tolerated," Papademos told Parliament just before the vote. "I call on the public to show calm. At these crucial times, we do not have the luxury of this type of protest. I think everyone is aware of how serious the situation is."

    Since May 2010, Greece has survived on a $145 billion (euro110 billion) bailout from its European partners and the International Monetary Fund. When that proved insufficient, the new rescue package was approved. The deal, which has not yet been finalized, will be combined with a massive bond swap deal to write off half the country's privately held debt.

    But for both deals to materialize, Greece had to persuade its deeply skeptical creditors that it has the will to implement spending cuts and public sector reforms that will end years of fiscal profligacy and tame gaping budget deficits.

    As protests raged Sunday, demonstrators set bonfires in front of parliament and dozens of riot police formed lines to keep them from making a run on the building. Security forces fired dozens of tear gas volleys at rioters, who attacked them with firebombs and chunks of marble broken off the fronts of luxury hotels, banks and department stores.

    Clouds of tear gas drifted across the square, and many in the crowd wore gas masks or had their faces covered, while others carried Greek flags and banners. Masked rioters also attacked a police station with petrol bombs and stones.

    A three-story building was completely consumed by flames as firefighters struggled to douse the blaze. Streets were strewn with stones, smashed glass and burnt wreckage, while terrified passers-by sought refuge in hotel lounges and cafeterias.

    Scores of bat-wielding youths smashed property at will for several hours, leaving broken traffic lights hanging from poles, and chairs and tables from looted coffee shops dumped on the street. Ambulances weaved through narrow backstreets to ferry the injured to hospital, dodging burning trash bins and the running battles between rioters and police.

    "I've had it! I can't take it any more. There's no point in living in this country any more," said a distraught shop owner walking through his smashed and looted optician store.

    Athens Mayor Giorgos Kaminis said rioters tried to storm the City Hall building, but were repelled. "Once again, the city is being used as a lever to try to destabilize the country," he said.

    In parliament, Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos said the new austerity measures were vital to the country's very economic survival.

    "The question is not whether some salaries and pensions will be curtailed, but whether we will be able to pay even these reduced wages and pensions," he told lawmakers before the vote. "When you have to choose between bad and worse, you will pick what is bad to avoid what is worse."

    The new cutbacks, which follow two years of harsh income losses and tax hikes amid a deep recession and record high unemployment have been demanded by Greece's bailout creditors in return for a new batch of vital rescue loans.

    Greece's eurozone partners, meanwhile, kept up the pressure for real reform.

    German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble was quoted as telling the Welt am Sonntag newspaper on Sunday that Greece "cannot be a bottomless pit."

    Highlighting previous pledges he said weren't kept, Schaeuble said "that is why Greece's promises aren't enough for us any more."

    Asked whether Greece has a long-term future in the eurozone, Germany's Vice Chancellor Philip Roesler said "that is now in the hands of the Greeks alone."

    "It is not enough just to give financial aid — they must tackle the second cause of the crisis, the lack of economic competitiveness," he told said ARD television. "For that, they need ... massive structural reforms. Otherwise Greece will not get out of the crisis."

    Introducing the legislation Sunday, Socialist lawmaker Sofia Yiannaka said the intense pressure from Greece's EU partners to pass the measures was the result of delays in implementing already agreed reforms.

    "The delays have our imprint. We should not blame foreigners for them," she said. "We have finally found out that you have to pay back what you have borrowed."

    ___

    Demetris Nellas in Athens and Geir Moulson in Berlin contributed to this report.

     
    • Edward  •  Athens, Greece  •  3 mths ago
      May I present an actual perspective from Greece, since I live in it?

      We are torn apart by a generation of people who even today votes for those ridiculous governments,and with a stupid law, by having a "majority vote" despite being around 25% of the total population, they continue to constantly pass the ball between the same players: Pasok and Nea Dimokratia. Those people voting for them either get wages above 2000 euro each month and earn hundreds of thousands of euro under the table just because the continue to support those governments, or are too stupid to simply believe that they are going to get a slice of the pie at some point as well... In the mean time the average monthly income of the law-abiding citizen is under 600 euro. And ALL the austerity measures target only those people.

      Example: I have a friend whose father used to ear 4800 each month for being a plumber in the public sector while my friend barely could make 800 working twice that much in the public sector. Now you tell me who votes for what is happening out there and who is paying the actual price.

      Long story short, a small group of greedy people get voted by a larger group of either corrupt or stupid people and the rest just pay for both. They have majority in the parliament thus pass any law they want without opposition including the one that actually gives them the majority despite having such small percentages and they sell out country and people alike.

      Greece has two generations: That of our fathers that most of them earn more than 2000 monthly on average (baby boomers, who made that system in the first place) and young people who are considered lucky if they earn more than 800. Oh, and try to tell that second group about the 14 month wages joke... Our country was sold to Europe long ago by those who won't even be there when it will sink into oblivion.

      Greetings from Greece...
      • A Yahoo! User 3 mths ago
        I hope you guys riot against the European Union so you can get your sovereignty, country, and original currency back. We here in America are praying for you guys. Revolution is coming here to the USA as well but most people here are to selfish and only caring about what is on TV.
      • libtardsuc 3 mths ago
        We've been trying to tell our idiots the same thing is going to happen here. Libtards are thick headed the world over I guess.
      • figaro 3 mths ago
        Hey Edward, The sheeple here are more worried about Whitney Houston dying than their own Constitution and freedoms going in the garbage can. When the free money runs out who is going to pay the freight then?
    • MY 2 CENTS  •  St Louis, Missouri  •  3 mths ago
      A friend works at a air force base ( civil service job ) and he told me they order office supplies. and I freaked when he told me, that the military pays way to much for simple stuff we get at the local store. $2.37 for one bic pen, $20.00 for 500 sheets of copy paper. $6.00 for a box of paper clips. well you get the point!
      • Edward 3 mths ago
        Greece spends more than 50% for military equipment. Big buck are made this way between corrupt officials. And to maintain all that, it still has mandatory army service, drafting potential employees by force, to work without payment in the military, all this the taxpayers money....
      • hollander 3 mths ago
        You are from Greece. You I will believe.
      • Robert 3 mths ago
        I think just about every Country needs an anime to get rid of corruption.
    • ALLISFAIR  •  Oklahoma City, Oklahoma  •  3 mths ago
      what kind of #$%$ doesn't understand the words "we are broke"? I forgot our president doesn't
    • Robert  •  Mantua, New Jersey  •  3 mths ago
      You could tax the rich in this country 100% and not come close to paying our debts and budgets.What about the 48% of America that pays NO TAXES?? Get a good look at Greece,folks,it's OUR future very soon.We don't have a taxing problem-we have a spending problem.God help our kids and their's futures.
      • R 3 mths ago
        Like many of the big corporations who off shore their facilities to avoid taxes...and pay no tax here...let's not forget them.
      • hollander 3 mths ago
        48% pay no federal income tax. They do pay other taxes, NJ. Get your facts straight, right wing pea brain!
      • William 3 mths ago
        you are exactly right. you cant keep living on borrowed income. Quit trying to manage debt and get out of debt. a little debt is too much!
    • Robert Smith  •  Houston, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      This show is coming to a theater in your neighborhood soon !
      • wombat 3 mths ago
        No doubt! Just cut off welfare to any urban area and they will rape and pillage the timid unarmed liberal suburbanites.
      • DeputyDawg 3 mths ago
        Newsflash you two: it's already happening. You should know unless you're miles from any major urban area. Worked for the courts for a decade, worst I've ever seen.
    • Trader-Bob  •  Fort Wayne, Indiana  •  3 mths ago
      Coming soon to a Washington DC near you!!!
    • Matt C.  •  3 mths ago
      Same thing can come to our country in a few years, if we live that long!
      • VanessaL 3 mths ago
        Oh, we will, Matt C.! But it won't be our country anymore. We've been lucky so far that we haven't had the kind of problems other countries experience: internecine conflicts, transnational wars, daily bombings, etc. And there's the problem of Mexico right now and the Mexican mafia already in CA. I really do see a day when we get taken over by another country simply because we got too used to being free that we, slowly and surely, gave it up.
      • DeputyDawg 3 mths ago
        What she said.
    • The Psychotic Libertarian  •  3 mths ago
      Greece has no more money. How do the socialists expect the government to still maintain the programs, when the nation has no money?
    • Purge  •  3 mths ago
      Greece is a prime example of the people have to stop asking what can my country do for me? If the rest of the world doesn't see what happens when everyone constantly asks what can the country do for me, we are all doomed to be GREECE!! How many times has Greece gone bankrupt? What difference does it make to do it one more time?
    • Rogue  •  Flagstaff, Arizona  •  3 mths ago
      Suddenly the crazy guy down the street with all the guns doesn't seem so crazy.
    • bon_iccal  •  3 mths ago
      FYI America, if the nations of man stop using the dollar as the global financial reserve printing more money will cause immediate, catastrophic hyper-inflation. If the dollar decreases in value by 27% then the price of everything you buy would increase by 27%, and this could very possibly happen overnight.
    • Someone  •  3 mths ago
      "We have finally found out that you have to pay back what you have borrowed." Good for you Greece. Here in the States we're still turning our heads the other direction.
    • Rushster  •  Los Angeles, California  •  3 mths ago
      heres the problem ... on yahoo they have a page that says stars grace the red carpet.
      Then they show Kelley Osborne and Snookie..... what on Earth are they talking about. They are not stars.
      My point is..... That what you are reading in almost every article is just that 1 persons opinion. the article is by DEREK GATOPOULOS and NICHOLAS PAPHITIS do anyone of you know who they are... no..... but we read this and take it at face value.
      The news is no longer reporting the news but rather creating the news...
      Is the Greek story news worthy. Yes... but are you absolutely ...positively ... sure these two guys are telling you the real deal.???? food for thought.
    • sxcvbxcb  •  Richmond, Virginia  •  3 mths ago
      America's future
    • Duke  •  3 mths ago
      Ya can't live off the government. Someone has to pay those living off the government. Greece is the example of what can happen here if the spending and dependence on China taking our debt continues.
    • PF  •  3 mths ago
      When the parasite becomes larger than the host... the host dies.
    • Blue_Jacket  •  3 mths ago
      People of America needs to take a LONG LOOK at Greece as it is in our NEAR FUTURE if we don't cut our budget and cut it now, starting with politicians pay and benefits.
    • baby boomer  •  3 mths ago
      Well, I guess that 32 hour work week, 30 days payed vacation, Full retirement at 52 years old,fully payed medical--did not work out very well--they ran out of other people's money. I wonder how long till the democrats are rioting in the streets?
    • Rich  •  3 mths ago
      Nothing like destroying your capital base by having the government run everything. Too many people working for the government and taking too much of the money from the private sector. No wonder they are a mess, I don't care what they say, government workers do not pay taxes to help a country, they just give some of the taxes back that they were given in the first place. Only real jobs that make things with real workers hands actually make money that can increase the tax revenue for a government. Good think Greece is so small, it gives the larger countries a look at what can happen- just wish they would have read up on the USSR earlier....
    • Gambit  •  Huntsville, Alabama  •  3 mths ago
      What exactly are these austerity measures? Increasing the retirement age to 60? Increasing the work hours per week to 40? Decreasing the eligibility for jobless benefits to 5 years? The article never explains what they are rioting about.
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