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    Greece passes austerity, but riots seize capital

    ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Greece fended off a bankruptcy that would have roiled global markets and threatened the future of the euro when lawmakers on Wednesday backed controversial austerity measures in the face of violent protests. More than 100 people were injured.

    Investors cheered the bill — which aims to cut spending and raise taxes by €28 billion ($40 billion) and raise €50 billion ($71 billion) in privatizations over five years — but, in Athens, the mood was dark. In a haze of tear gas, protesters hurled anything they could find at riot police and tried to blockade the Parliament building.

    A Greek default would threaten the viability of the euro, the EU's common currency, and send shock waves through global markets similar to those that kicked off the global financial meltdown after the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008.

    While world markets rose on the news that the bill passed, Greece is not yet out of the woods. The bill — along with another that must be passed Thursday on implementing the austerity package — will release the next €12 billion ($17 billion) installment of a €110 billion ($157 billion) international bailout from the European Union and the International Monetary Fund. Eurogroup head Jean-Claude Juncker indicated after the vote that Greece would get the fifth batch of its bailout loans.

    But many Greeks complain they have already paid dearly in a year that has seen public sector salaries and pensions cut and unemployment rise to above 16 percent.

    "This is bad, the country will be sold for a piece of bread," said Dimitris Kostopoulos, a 48-year-old insurer who was protesting Wednesday. "There were many other more appropriate alternatives to this. Parliament has once again betrayed us."

    The next installment Greece hopes to get will only see it through September, leaving open the question of how the country, burdened with piles of debt, will right itself.

    On Sunday, eurozone finance ministers will meet in Brussels to make progress on a second bailout for Greece that is hoped will address more long-term problems. As part of that plan, banks are expected to share some of the burden, possibly by rolling over Greek bonds that they hold, as French banks have already volunteered to do.

    Prime Minister George Papandreou has said the second bailout will be roughly the same size as the first.

    But many economists expect even that reprieve will not be enough, and Greece will need a more significant restructuring of its debt.

    "We must avoid the country's collapse with every effort," Papandreou said before the vote. "Outside, many are protesting. Some are truly suffering, others are losing their privileges. It is their democratic right. But they and no one else must never suffer the consequences ... of a collapse."

    But the specter of continued protests could undermine the government's ability to implement the harsh austerity measures, which slap taxes on even some of the lowest-paid Greeks and raise consumer taxes during a recession.

    "While approval of the package is an essential first step toward Greece getting the much-needed funding it needs from the EU/IMF to meet its upcoming financial obligations, they are not out of the water just yet," said Carl Campus, an analyst at BMO Capital Markets.

    As lawmakers voted, stun grenades echoed across the square outside Parliament and acrid clouds of tear gas and orange and green mist from smoke bombs and flares hung in the air. Several banks and storefronts were smashed, while a Socialist dissenter who backed the government at the last minute, Alexandros Athanassiadis, was briefly assaulted by protesters after leaving Parliament on foot.

    Violence continued throughout the afternoon, and smoke billowed from a post office beneath the Finance Ministry, before the fire was put out. Rioters set up burning barricades along Syntagma Square, where demonstrators have staged a sit-in for the past month. Nearby streets were littered with thousands of chunks of smashed marble and ripped up paving stones used to throw at police.

    A general strike that began Tuesday also ground the country to a halt, grounding planes, docking ferries and stranding tourists during the busy summer season.

    By Wednesday night, police said 38 officers had been injured, including one who was seriously hurt when he was hit in the face by a chunk of marble. Thirty protesters were detained, with 11 of them arrested. Emergency services said they had treated 99 protesters and passers-by for injuries.

    Dozens of injured were treated at a makeshift first aid center set up inside the square's metro station. Most were treated for breathing problems, contusions and broken bones, volunteers at the first aid center said, appealing for medical supplies.

    Across Europe, officials hailed the vote as an act of "national responsibility" and urged Greek lawmakers to follow up with another positive vote Thursday.

    "That's really good news," German Chancellor Angela Merkel said when told of the outcome of the vote on her way out of an economic forum in Berlin. Germany is Greece's biggest creditor.

    In a joint statement, the heads of the EU commission and council, Jose Manuel Barroso and Herman Van Rompuy, said Greece had taken "a vital step back — from the very grave scenario of default."

    Equally, relief was the main response in markets. Soon after the vote, the euro was trading at a fairly elevated level around the $1.44 mark while stock markets around the world were posting big gains.

    The unpopular package of spending cuts and tax hikes passed by 155 votes to 138, with five opposition deputies voting "present" — a ballot which backs neither side.

    ____

    Christopher Torchia, Menelaos Hadjicostis and Demetris Nellas in Athens and Geir Moulson in Berlin contributed.

     

    65 comments

    • Woody  •  7 mths ago
      look people I do not believe in the government provideing all these socila programs but in this case I want to see a default and the citizens take back their country from the corrupt bankers! If there is a default then we will all hurt but the corrupt bankers will be the biggest loser as all those Greek bonds will turn into toilet paper and the banks that bought them up will fall and so will the rest of the corrupt system. So come on Greeks fight and bring the system down!
    • Nunya Business  •  7 mths ago
      You people apparently don't realize that the people do not owe this money. The bankers made risky investments and they gambled the people's pension funds. Kill the banks!
    • IntrepidJohn  •  7 mths ago
      I feel bad for Greek people. The are officially SLAVES TO THE BANKS, and their children and grandchildren. Who is up next for the grabs?
    • God of War  •  7 mths ago
      Quote from the artical "There were many other more appropriate alternatives to this. Parliament has once again betrayed us." oh yeah name one.
    • Mr. Nihil  •  7 mths ago
      Well, at least the investors are happy. Good for them. ...
    • Sylvain R  •  7 mths ago
      "Investors cheered the bill" That says it all about who these measures benefit.
    • oldcodger  •  7 mths ago
      "continued protests could undermine the government's ability to implement the harsh austerity measures, which slap taxes on even some of the lowest-paid Greeks"
      You know that the socialist pendulum has about reached it's pinnacle when the very idea of taxing the "even the lowest paid" is being proposed
    • aaamichael01  •  7 mths ago
      The IMF is forcing governments to sell government owned property.......so Wall Street's "failed" Jewish banks can scoop them up at fire sale prices. It's all about the Jews, right Christian Lagarde, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, Ben Bernanke, Timothy Geithner, those "failed" Jewish banks that created worthless derivatives out of leftover subprime mortgages.............

      .............and sold them to America's retirement and pension funds knowing they were worthless all along.

      Jews brought “Hyperinflation” to Germany in the 1920s & 30s.

      Jews bring “Hyperfinflation” to American today.
      .
      .
      .

      Jews………America’s misfortune.

      ..
    • Real Economist  •  7 mths ago
      It's unfortunate to hear many people's comments here. It makes me realize the media is not doing a good job of explaining what is going on in Greece, Europe at large, and the United States.
      1) Greece was a country where there was no sense of social responsibility to the country because historically it has had dictators or a closed political system (the current Prime Minister's father ran the country in the 1980s and his grandfather was a major political figure before). Money, borrowed from abroad, was used by the government and political elites to give lavishly to the people to keep the civil peace while the wealthy in Greece offshored their wealth in Swiss bank accounts, or went on with life by having close, corrupt links with companies (politicians typically have their own companies, or are part of a company's board). People in Greece are upset because they want the wealthy, who they see as the political establishment, bare more of the burden, instead of having austerity policies only shouldered by the masses. This has a lot of similarities to America.
      2) Greece may have socialist policies, but so does every country, including America. And including the wealthy, fiscally sound countries that are now required to bailout Greece like Germany, Finland, the Netherlands and France, which all have lower deficits than the United States and lower national debt levels. They are successful because they do not believe in ideologies - they have a system with a mix of social policies and regulated capitalism.
      3) America's deficit is not simply Obama's fault. Granted, he's not doing anything right now to resolve it. Most of the deficit is attributed to a decline in revenue (not an increase in expenses) because of the worst recession since the Great Depression. It is also due to the fact that there is no housing bubble artificially lifting revenues like in the last decade. Without the housing bubble, the deficits under the Bush years would have been much larger. The deficit is also growing because incomes for the average American has declined in the last 10 years (so, tax receipts must have declined correspondingly). You can see it in your own budget - all your expenses, from food to rent has gone up, but not your income. The wealthy may pay taxes at a rate of 35%, but after all their credits, deductions and offshoring of profits, their EFFECTIVE tax rate is much lower (Goldman paid 1% in taxes in 2008). I admire people like Sergei Brin who created Google, and Steve Jobs of Apple. But bankers and corporate CEOs did not create their companies or the products their companies create. Yet, they pay themselves 400 times more than the average worker simply because they can - not because it was deserved.
      4) Public sector workers, including firemen, policemen and teachers are not the reason why the government is losing money. It is because this country, without a housing bubble, cannot produce anything. Only one thing is true in economics: The more you produce, the more you'll consume. Why aren't we producing anything? Because Asia's governments are manipulating currency markets to make their currencies (thus their wages and prices) cheaper. It gives the impression that Americans are overpaid, when they are not. In the 1990s, America invented the mass production of personal computers and advanced cell phones only for Asian governments to cheat their currencies lower to make their producers more competitive to push the likes out IBM and Dell out of the market (whoever heard of Taiwanese companies like Asus and Acer in the early 2000s?) In the 1980s, it was Japan that was cheating America through currency markets, which is what almost crushed GM and Ford. Japan's cheating caught up to it that it went into a financial crisis since the mid-1990s. Since 2001, the country that has been cheating America is China. American's cannot produce, thus they cannot consume fairly...they, and their government has to consume through debt
    • Bill White  •  7 mths ago
      Yes folks Greece is a good example of what happens to world citizen sheep when their government make shady deals with carpet baggers. First the carpet baggers make loans and then blow up the economy. And since the citizen sheep can't make the loan payments. The carpet bagges come in and buy up everything of value for next to nothing!!!
    • Helorider  •  7 mths ago
      Socialism is great, generous, caring...until you run out of money.
    • aaamichael01  •  7 mths ago
      Why is it a fight for freedom and democracy in the Arab world, but when the IMF gets involved it's simply riots against austerity measure ??? IMF, World Bank, Federal Reserve, American Treasury, Wall Street..........all Jews.
      Obama’s White House (Obama’s owners)
      .
      .

      (Radical) Rahm Emanuel(Jew) –Chief of Staff

      Mona Sutphen (Jew) – Deputy Chief of Staff

      David Axelrod (Jew) - Senior Advisor to the President

      Lee Feinstein (Jew) – Foreign Policy Adivsor

      Benjamin Bernanke (Jew) - Chairman, Federal Reserve System

      Timothy Geithner (Jew) - Secretary, U.S. Treasury Department

      Lawrence Summers (Jew) - Chairman, National Economic Council

      Paul Volcker (Jew) - Chairman, Economic Recovery Advisory Board

      Jared Bernstein (Jew) - Chief Economist and Economic Adviser, Vice President

      Peter Orszag (Jew) - Director, Office of Management and Budget(OMB)

      Gary Gensler (Jew) - Chairman, Commodity Futures Trading Commission(CFTC)

      Mary Schapiro (Jew) - Chairman, Securities and Exchange Commission(SEC)

      Sheila Bair (Jew) - Chairman, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation(FDIC)

      Karen Mills (Jew) - Administrator, Small Business Administration (SBA)

      Christina Romer (Jew husband) - Chairman, Council of Economic Advisers

      Elena Kagan (Jew)– Solicitor General

      Dennis Ross (Jew) - Special Advisor for the Gulf and Southwest Asia to the Secretary of State
      .
      .
      .

      Jews own Congress
      .
      .

      Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.)

      Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.)

      Joseph Lieberman (D-Conn.)

      Carl Levin (D-Mich.)

      Al Franken (D-Minn.)

      Frank Lautenberg (D-N.J.)

      Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.)

      Ron Wyden (D-Ore.)

      Arlen Specter (R-Pa.)

      Russell Feingold (D-Wisc.)

      Herb Kohl (D-Wisc.)

      Benjamin L. Cardin (D-MD)

      Bernard Sanders (I-VT)
      .
      .
      .

      Jews in the House of Representatives
      .
      .

      Howard Berman (D-Calif.)

      Susan Davis (D-Calif.)

      Bob Filner (D-Calif.)

      Jane Harman (D-Calif.)

      Jackie Speier (D-Calif.)

      Adam Schiff (D-Calif.)

      Brad Sherman (D-Calif.)

      Howard Waxman (D-Calif.)

      Peter Deutsch (D-Fla.)

      Robert Wexler (D-Fla.)

      Rahm Emanuel (D-Ill.)
      (Son of a Jewish terrorist now in Oval Office controlling Obama)

      Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.)

      Ben Cardin (D-Md.)

      Barney Frank (D-Mass.)

      Sander Levin (D-Mich.)

      Shelley Berkley (D-Nev.)

      Steve Rothman (D-N.J.)

      Gary Ackerman (D-N.Y.)

      Eliot Engel (D-N.Y.)

      Steve Israel (D-N.Y.)

      Nita Lowey (D-N.Y.)

      Jerry Nadler (D-N.Y.)

      Anthony Weiner (D-N.Y.)

      Martin Frost (D-Texas)

      Eric Cantor (R-Va.)

      Bernard (Barney) Sanders (Ind-Vt.)

      Stephen Cohen (D-NH)

      Gabrielle Giffords (D-AZ)

      Paul Hodes (D-NH)

      Steve Kagen (D-WI)

      Ronald Klein (D-FL),

      John Yarmuth (D-KY).

      .
      .

      Jews brought “Hyperinflation” to Germany in the 1920s & 30s.

      Jews bring “Hyperfinflation” to American today.
      .
      .
      .

      Jews………America’s misfortune.

      Ever wonder why our government supports the apartheid state of Nazi Israel and their attempts to annihilate what's left of their half-brother's family and steal even more of their land ??? Israel has nuclear weapons, refuses to sign the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, and attacks more of it's neighbors than any other mideast nation. And Americans donate more tax dollars to those blood lusting Jews than any other nation.

      Here is why.

      Ever wonder why our government donated over a trillion dollars to those "failed" Jewish banks on Wall Street that created worthless derivates...

      ......and sold them to America's retirement and pension funds knowing they were worthless all along ???

      Here's the reason.
      .
      ..
    • demetrios  •  7 mths ago
      what is NOT being reported in the USA media is what the police, the MAT and Zeta Forces did to the old and young protesters today. I saw it live on greek tv. the protesting was a normal fight between the police and hooligans (which were not part of the general protest and it has been revealed that they are actually plants from within the govt and police force) throwing rocks and molotov cocktails and then all of a sudden something changed. The police chased the elderly, women, children and youth down towards the metro station at Syntagma Square and fired teargas and some other chemical into the crowds. the crowd was trapped and was not able to escape. so far over 600 injured and more than 40 had to be rushed to hospitals. the police wouldnt even allow ambulances into the area. f****g batsoi pigs!!! this is the new world order...watch out spain, ireland, portugal and italy...you all are next...and mind you while all these protests have been raging, the ICC, Bilderberg Group, Wallstreet Billionaire's and others like Steven Forbes were in the hotel across the street carving up greece's assets as they salivate over their victory at the cost of the sovreignty of a nation.

      EPANASTEITE ELLINES!!!
    • T. L  •  7 mths ago
      I believe that the time has passed to reorganize the banking industry....They have become passive and corrupt over the years, and with the governments of the world allowing them more and more leway room for profits, they have gone way to far in excessive charges that they charge to their customers. And that is only the tip of the iceburg.
    • no  •  7 mths ago
      More power to the Greeks, the very people who created both money and democracy 2500 years ago, the combination of the two being the catalyst of the global crisis. Greece is again the tip of the spear in world history.
    • Harley Creel  •  7 mths ago
      Private profits and public debt and the bankers reap the profits, the populus, the debt?
    • J EDGAR  •  7 mths ago
      What's worse, Greece defaulting on its debts or the people of Greece destroying the entire country?
    • Right is Right  •  7 mths ago
      When the "have not's" out number the "have's" things will go to poop in a hurry!
      Ain't socialism just great - Obama, Pelosi and Reid better pay attention or they'll be in this very same boat!
    • potato  •  7 mths ago
      There's really only one solution to take the peoples' minds off the economy.

      Christians?

      Lions?

      Yeeha.
    • BleedBlue  •  7 mths ago
      So the Commies did win in Greece..
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