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    Greece on strike as bailout deal in limbo

    ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Thousands took to the streets of Athens as unions launched a two-day general strike against planned austerity measures on Friday, a day after Greece's crucial international bailout was put in limbo by its partners in the 17-nation eurozone.

    Clashes broke out in Syntagma Square, outside Parliament, as dozens of hooded youths threw fire bombs and stones at police, who responded with tear gas. No arrests or injuries were reported.

    Police said some 7,000 people took part in the demonstration. Another 10,000 Communist supporters held a separate, peaceful march, chanting slogans against cutbacks that include reducing the minimum wage by 22 percent and cutting one in five government jobs in a country which is in its fifth year of recession.

    Bailout creditors say Greece has not yet met demands for all the required austerity measures and, frustrated by days of dithering, have given political leaders in Athens until the middle of next week to do so. Otherwise, the country will lose its rescue loan lifeline, go bankrupt next month and likely leave the euro.

    "We are experiencing tragic moments," Deputy Prime Minister Theodoros Pangalos told Parliament Friday. "These days are the last acts of a drama that we all hope will lead to a happy conclusion with a voluntary reduction in our public debt and implementation of a framework by 2015 that will allow the economy to stabilize."

    The Greek coalition government, led by Prime Minister Lucas Papademos had hoped some of the heat had been taken out of the crisis after leaders agreed Thursday to a raft of austerity measures they hoped would pave the way for the euro130 billion ($173 billion) bailout package.

    However, finance ministers from the other 16 eurozone states put up a roadblock later in the day by insisting that Greece had to save an extra euro325 million ($430 million), pass the cuts through a restive parliament and guarantee in writing that they will be implemented even after planned elections in April.

    A Cabinet meeting has been called for the afternoon, while the majority Socialists and the conservatives were later to hold party meetings to discuss the cutbacks.

    The new hurdles Greece has to clear to avoid a default that could send shockwaves around the global economy dented sentiment in the markets Friday. Stocks were down all over Europe, with the benchmark index in Athens 1.8 percent lower in early afternoon trading.

    While facing intense pressure abroad, Greece is having to deal with another strike. The country's two biggest labor unions stopped railway, ferry and public transport schedules, and hospitals worked on skeleton staff while most public services were disrupted. Unions were planning protests in Athens and other cities around midday.

    Prime Minister Papademos and heads of the three parties backing his government have already agreed to deep private sector wage cuts, civil service layoffs, and significant reductions in health, social security and military spending.

    But the party leaders balked at demands for more cuts to already depleted pensions, later issuing nebulous assurances that a solution had been found.

    "Unfortunately, the eurogroup did not take a final, positive decision," Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos said after Thursday's talks in Brussels. "Many countries expressed objections, based on the fact that we did not fully complete the list of additional measures required to meet our targets for 2012."

    "The choice we face is one of sacrifice or even greater sacrifice — on a scale that cannot be compared," Venizelos added.

    Once all the demands have been fulfilled, the eurozone will give Greece the green light to start implementing a separate bond swap deal with banks and other private investors designed to slice some euro100 billion ($132 billion) off Greece's debt load.

    EU Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso on Friday offered hope a deal could still be struck.

    "I am confident that a solution will be reached next week as this is critically important for Greece and the Greek citizens first and foremost but also for the whole euro area," he said during a visit to India. "I therefore call on the responsibility and the leadership of the Greek leaders and all members of the eurozone so that we can obtain this goal that is important for the euro area and indeed for the global economy."

    France's central bank chief Christian Noyer also urged Greece to accept the "reasonable and indispensable" austerity plan.

    "Greece needs to do what other countries are doing, countries that have been in difficulty but are completely in line with the recovery plans," Noyer said on Europe-1 radio Friday. "Greece has to accept all of this."

    But on the streets of Greece, the mood is grim, after two years of severe income losses, repeated tax hikes and retirement age increases that failed to signally improve the country's finances. Unemployment is at a record high of 21 percent — with more than a million people out of work — while the economy is in its fifth year of recession and is expected to contract up to 5 percent in 2012.

    The country's politicians have taken a lot of criticism for the situation, and polls show the majority Socialists, elected in a 2009 landslide are now languishing at around 8 percent.

    A Greek Socialist lawmaker resigned his seat Friday to protest the new austerity, a day after the country's deputy labor ministry stepped down from his position for the same reason. But the resignation of Pavlos Stasinos will not affect the party balance in Parliament, as he will be replaced by another Socialist deputy.

    "It is unacceptable that right now our politicians' petty political and public relations maneuvering should be leading the country to bankruptcy," respected Kathimerini daily said in an editorial. "The country is tumbling towards a cliff-edge, and a tough European establishment is putting out the view that Greece cannot be saved and lacks credible politicians. Our politicians back that view with their carryings-on."

    Ta Nea daily accused Greek politicians of "theatrics and shilly-shallying," and urged lawmakers to back the new measures in the Parliamentary vote, tentatively planned for Sunday.

    "Nobody can happily back the painful agreement with the troika," it said in an editorial. "But neither can anyone shoulder the burden of the consequences, if the agreement is not completed."

    ___

    Slobodan Lekic in Brussels and Angela Charlton in Paris contributed.

     
    • aln  •  3 mths ago
      learning experience ... spending more than you take in(year in and year out) ... doesn't work ... whether as an individual, a family, a business or a government ... unfortunately many of those mentioned .. just do not get it ... common sense ... not nonsense
      • jakepi 3 mths ago
        The people of the US need Uncommon Sense to get through this!
      • Steve 3 mths ago
        Great post and thanks gona rrepost
      • Insidious Banana 3 mths ago
        The U.S. government is on the same path, of course.
    • baby boomer  •  3 mths ago
      Let's see----high wages, retirement at 52, full medical, full pension, 30 days vacation a year, %25 employed by the government (none producers)------What went wrong?
      • ZEKE 3 mths ago
        The voters and taxpayers caught on.
      • Richard 3 mths ago
        In 2008 the minumum wage in Greece was over $1000/month. Athens is fairly expensive, rated around 30th in the world, but the rest of Greece is cheap if you live like a Greek. For example, rice and tomato sauce cost about 50% of what it is in the USA. However, if you want to eat like an American it is going to be about 30% more.

        I think the EU and the Euro caused Europe to get very expensive. Before the 1990s Europe was very cheap.
      • baseballrich2 3 mths ago
        Its gotten more expensive over the last several decades because of their socialist policies. Unfortunetly we are on the same path and picking up steam
    • Phil M.  •  Moscow, Pennsylvania  •  3 mths ago
      Wake up America! Our own gov't has added 130,000 employees in 3 years! We are headed down the same track as Greece! No Germany to bail us out though.
      • SamIam 3 mths ago
        The USA is 25% of the global economy, Greece is under 2% - NO COMPARISON - WE HAVE ALMOST INFINITE RESOURCES - the US debt is mostly owed to ... the USA (over 70%). If we default we harm ourselves only - won't ever happen - so don't worry, be happy, go out today and spend a few bucks ;-D
      • michaelk 3 mths ago
        Actually the government is one part of the economy that is shrinking these days
      • tlp 3 mths ago
        Just print more money!!
    • maryjanesuncle  •  Springfield, Missouri  •  3 mths ago
      Who is the Greek god of broke, hungry and out of work
    • baseballrich2  •  Las Vegas, Nevada  •  3 mths ago
      Greece needs to fail. It will show everyone what will happen if we get to this point. If you think its been a mess to this point just wait...
      • CharlieB 3 mths ago
        I agree Greece needs to go under- BUT OUR libtard illustrious leaders DO NOT EVER LOOK ACROSS THE POND AND SEE WHAT A COLOSAL FAILURE IT IS IN EUROPE- THEY are the example for our control IDIOTS!-From Ginsberg to Reed, Clinton, And even Obama ( now that last one was a surprise)-just to mention a few.
    • Bill  •  Middletown, New York  •  3 mths ago
      With 47% of US taxpayers paying 0 income tax and 53% paying for all the spending, the US is heading the same way! A matter of time!
    • Jacques D  •  Kitchener, Canada  •  3 mths ago
      In the words of John F. Kennedy..., "ask not what your country can do for you but what you can do for your country". Its time they learn that governments are not all things to all people.
    • DHC  •  Columbia, South Carolina  •  3 mths ago
      It's like looking into a crystal ball America, we are being warned and the leaders of this country just don't pay any attention on a greater level
    • ifnot4me  •  3 mths ago
      "Socialism is a wonderful thing, until you run out of other peoples money"
      Margret Thatcher

      America, pay attention, we are on a collision course with the same fate as Greece and the catastrophe is gaining momentum, however we have an opportunity to avert this if we change course in November. If you like what you see in Greece you'll LOVE America in Obama's next term. Every freedom you give up to this Marxist you or your children or their children's children will never enjoy again, Think long and hard before you cast your vote.
    • Michael  •  Sevierville, Tennessee  •  3 mths ago
      Margaret Thatcher was so right. Socialism is great until you run out of other peoples money
    • TerryS  •  3 mths ago
      This is the future of America under the leadership of President Obama, Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi. They take the tax dollars of the 51% of American households that actually pay federal income tax and redistribute them in the form of social welfare to "buy" voters.
    • Jimicon  •  Palm Beach Gardens, Florida  •  3 mths ago
      See Greece, think California, running out of cash by March. Liberalism run amok. All the rioting, marching, striking and whining does not solve the problem. No money !!!
    • SS  •  Sunnyvale, California  •  3 mths ago
      Coming soon to America thanks to obamo and co and the unions, Greece is broke yet the unions call a strike! Unbelievable but true
    • robert  •  Los Angeles, California  •  3 mths ago
      Going on strike only brings more misery to everybody. The government is broke! The workers are not going to get a pay raise. They are lucky just to have a job!
    • Gabriela  •  Bucharest, Romania  •  3 mths ago
      Since 2010, the same strikes.For me was a shock to see at Athens near 20 meters on May 1st, 2010 young Christians, but anarchists, protesting together with the Kurds and beating together with the police ... has become a NATIONAL SPORT. I saw just Bolshevik Communism Ideas, after the Greek Governments have made false reports to the European Commission, the Greeks have received such an unfair advantage: retirement at 55 years with 90% of last pension, bloated state apparatus, Greeks come out in the morning until the evening at the restaurants etc.Athens(so called new Bombay or Islamabad) is the gate for African and Asians illegal immigrants in the EU area .Anyway it is the failure of multiculturalism imposed , which tried to gypsies, muslims, africans etc. be integrated in European societies.
    • Jim  •  Dunbar, West Virginia  •  3 mths ago
      It's hard for deadbeats to let go of the "benefits" borrowed money got them. Wonder when the American deadbeats will finally bankrupt us ?
    • baby boomer  •  3 mths ago
      Why do the liberals not understand broke?
    • CurtG  •  3 mths ago
      Watch and learn, US. Once you have handed things to people, they resist you if you take it away. Their economy is unsustainable, as is obama's.
    • Kurt  •  Wausau, Wisconsin  •  3 mths ago
      Why socialism (government economic coercion) doesn't work--people (unions) overestimate the value of their contributions and underestimate the value of their consumption and then rage against the corporations and wealthy when they don't get as much as they "deserve." Only free markets tell the truth about labor worth and consumption.
    • George  •  3 mths ago
      They have actually ran out of other people's money and the mob cannot understand that the handouts have ended.
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