Greek violence flares for sixth day

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Xed
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Greek violence flares for sixth day

Post by Xed » Thu Dec 11, 2008 1:45 pm

By Daniel Flynn and Lefteris Papadimas

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ATHENS (Reuters) - Gangs of high school students hurled stones and fire bombs at police stations in Athens suburbs on Thursday, in a sixth day of anti-government violence since the police shooting of a teenager.

Central Athens was calmer than in previous days as people returned to work after a 24-hour general strike on Wednesday called by unions opposed to pension reforms and privatizations.

Trouble flared before dawn in Athens when students occupying the university clashed with police. By mid-morning, it spread to 15 police stations, from upmarket neighborhoods of north Athens to the working-class south.

Data released on Thursday showed that economic hardship is hitting more Greeks. Unemployment, especially high among young people and women, rose to 7.4 percent in September from 7.1 in August, reversing four years of decline, and economists said it would keep climbing as the global crisis reached Greece.

Many students carried banners reading "Why?" in reference to the police killing of 15-year-old Alexandros Grigoropoulos on Saturday, which ignited public anger at police brutality and economic difficulties aggravated by the global downturn.

Around 500 people besieged the central police station in the northern city of Thessaloniki, while crowds gathered in the western port of Patras and the northern city of Ioannina.

A left-wing rally was due later in central Athens, more protests were announced for Friday and Monday, and many Greeks asked how much longer the government could remain in power.

"The government has shown it cannot handle this. If police start imposing the law everyone will say the military junta is back," said Yannis Kalaitzakis, 49, an electrician. "The government is stuck between a rock and a hard place."

In bond markets, the spread between Greek debt and German benchmark bonds reached its widest point this decade -- nearly 190 basis points -- amid fears of further upheaval. "We ... do not expect investors to forget this situation quickly," said David Keeble, head of fixed income research at Calyon Bank.

Many Greeks were angry that the 37-year-old policeman charged with murdering the teenager did not express remorse to investigators on Wednesday. He said he fired warning shots in self-defense which ricocheted to kill the youth.

"Pouring petrol on the flames," said Ethnos newspaper.

Epaminondas Korkoneas and his work partner, who is charged as an accomplice, were sent to jail pending trial by a prosecutor on Wednesday. Cases often take months to reach court.

KARAMANLIS TO BRUSSELS

Prime Minister Costas Karamanlis, who has announced financial support for hundreds of businesses damaged by the rioting, traveled to Brussels for an EU summit on Thursday.

Karamanlis and opposition leader George Papandreou appealed for an end to the violence, which hit at least 10 Greek cities and caused property damage worth hundreds of millions of euros.

Greeks also protested in Paris, Berlin, London, Rome, The Hague, Moscow, New York, Italy and Cyprus. Attacks on a police station and bank by Spanish youths in Madrid and Barcelona also fueled concern about copy-cat protests.

While the Greek government, which has a one-seat majority in parliament, appeared to have weathered the immediate storm, its hands-off response to the rioting will damage its already low popularity ratings, pollsters said. The opposition socialist party, which leads in the polls, has called for an election.

"The most likely scenario now is that Karamanlis will call elections in two or three months' time," Georges Prevelakis, professor of geopolitics at Sorbonne University in Paris, said.

On Wednesday, foreign and domestic flights were grounded, banks and schools were shut, and hospitals ran on emergency services as hundreds of thousands of Greeks walked off the job.

Unions say privatizations, tax rises and pension reform have worsened conditions, especially for the fifth of Greeks who live below the poverty line, just as the global downturn is hurting the 240 billion euro ($315 billion) economy.

The Greek Commerce Confederation said damage to businesses in Athens alone was worth about 200 million euros, with 565 shops seriously damaged.

Karamanlis, who swept to power during the euphoria of the 2004 Athens Olympics, announced subsidies and tax relief measures for those affected, but shopkeepers were indignant.

"I don't care if and when they are going to give me money, l care about getting the shop running again," said clothing shop owner, Michael Bernelos. "I don't want mercy or handouts."

In four years of conservative rule, a series of scandals, devastating forest fires and unsuccessful economic measures have erased the optimistic mood of 2004.

http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=Alx3bCjLT-A

http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNew ... dChannel=0
When false religion is established, when all avenues of protest are closed, when potential revolutionaries are bribed, coopted or killed, then Hussein's model teaches man to be a martyr, and by his death witness to the truth and shake the evil empire:

"It is an invitation to all ages and generations that if you cannot kill, die".

- Ali Shariati

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Nasser
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Re: Greek violence flares for sixth day

Post by Nasser » Sat Dec 13, 2008 6:23 pm

credit to Wakantanka for photos
A riot policeman attempt to assist a colleague covered in flames from a petrol bomb thrown by protesters, during clashes in central Athens, Friday Dec. 12, 2008. Greek youths were hurling rocks and broken paving stones at riot police who responded with volleys of tear gas, on the seventh straight day of unrest over the fatal police shooting of a teenager last Saturday night. (AP / LEFTERIS PITARAKIS)
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Students clash with riot police, in front of the Greek Parliament in Athens, Greece, on 12 December 2008. University and high school students mobilized in central Athens for a rally while students occupied more than 400 school buildings across the country. Hundreds of stores have been burned or gutted since riots began last Saturday as gangs of hooded youths and self-styled anarchists smashed windows, looted shops and set up flaming barricades in streets across the country
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Kashmir89
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Re: Greek violence flares for sixth day

Post by Kashmir89 » Sun Dec 14, 2008 12:48 am

After firing 4,600 tear-gas canisters in the past week, the Greek police have nearly exhausted their stock. As they seek emergency supplies from Israel and Germany, still the petrol bombs and stones of the protesters rain down, with clashes again outside parliament yesterday
http://www.prisonplanet.com/are-the-gre ... -come.html
FREE PALESTINE-FREE KASHMIR
They Call our generation insane to the simple fact we express our pain.
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Ed
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Re: Greek violence flares for sixth day

Post by Ed » Sun Dec 14, 2008 12:55 am

The destructiveness of the daily protests, which left many stores in Athens’s smartest shopping area in ruins and caused an estimated €2bn (£1.79bn) in damage, has stunned Greece and baffled the world
wow.
our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter.

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