(Reuters) - Εκατοντάδες χιλιάδες Έλληνες άρχισαν μια 48-ωρη απεργία την Τρίτη για να διαμαρτυρηθούν για ένα νέο γύρο περικοπών στους μισθούς και των συντάξεων, το κοινοβούλιο αναμένεται να εγκρίνει το τελικό νομοσχέδιο..
The parliamentary vote on Wednesday is the
biggest test yet for the government of Prime Minister Antonis Samaras,
which needs victory to secure aid from foreign lenders but has failed to
convince its smallest coalition partner and the public to back the
reforms.
The strike, called by
Greece's two biggest labor unions representing half of the four
million-strong workforce, brought public transport to a virtual
standstill and shuttered schools, banks and local government offices.
A
crowd of about 16,000 protesters - fewer than is usual during Greece's
frequent strikes - gathered outside parliament in Athens, waving flags,
beating drums and chanting "People, don't bow your heads!" and "This
strike is only the beginning".
It
was the third major walkout in two months against the package of public
spending cuts and reforms making it easier to hire and fire workers,
which many Greeks feel penalize the poor and spare a wealthy elite.
"The
measures are wrong, the politicians and the rich aren't paying their
taxes and the only ones paying are those on 300 and 500 euros a month,"
said Dimitris Karavelas 42, who has been forced to shut down his small
construction company.
Successions of strikes since Greece
fell into crisis in 2009 have so far failed to prevent parliament from
approving the international lender-prescribed cuts, which have inflicted
misery on the country and kept the economy in a deep recession.
"TO HELL AND BEYOND"
The
government has implored Greeks to endure the cuts to avoid national
bankruptcy and promised this will be the last round of pain. Greeks, who
have seen many such promises broken before, have responded with a mix
of resignation and anger.
"They
should go to hell and beyond," said Anais Metaxopoulou, a 65-year-old
pensioner. "They should ask me how I feel when I have to go to church to
beg for food. I wouldn't hurt a fly but I would happily behead one of
them."
Parliamentary approval for
the package - which includes cutting pensions by as much as a quarter
and scrapping holiday bonuses - is needed to ensure Greece's European
Union and International Monetary Fund lenders release more than 31
billion euros ($40 billion) of aid, much of it aimed at shoring up
banks.
With 16 deputies from the
small Democratic Left planning to vote against reforms and a
non-committal response from at least five Socialist lawmakers, Samaras
can count on the support of only about 154 lawmakers in the 300-seat
parliament.
Any further defections
from the Socialist PASOK party could put the government at risk of
falling below the 151 votes needed to pass the measures, ushering in
political chaos that would once again raise fears of a Greek euro zone exit.
NOTHING LEFT TO CUT
Exasperated by years of broken promises to reform, Greece's lenders have warned Athens that it cannot afford to fail again.
"Our
Greek friends have no options or choice. They have to do it," said
Jean-Claude Juncker, the head of the Eurogroup of euro zone finance ministers. "I am very optimistic."
Trains,
buses and the subway came to a halt as the strike began. Many flights
have been cancelled, ships remained in port and taxi drivers stayed off
the streets.
The opposition
anti-bailout Syriza party, which polls show is leading in popularity,
called for a big turnout in rallies against measures it said would deal a
"final blow" to society.
Police beefed up security to prepare for clashes with hooded protesters that usually mark demonstrations.
But
by 1330 GMT demonstrators had peacefully dispersed from Syntagma
Square, where protesters have frequently clashed with police in front of
parliament.
Greece's economy has
shrunk by a fifth since the debt crisis exploded. Public debt is seen at
189 percent of gross domestic product next year and Athens is expected
to be widely off track from targets under its latest bailout agreed with
the troika of the IMF, the European Commission and the European Central
Bank.
Many Greeks say the latest cuts will do little to solve the country's debt problem and instead could tear society apart.
"Someone
needs to tell them there's nothing left to cut," said Vassilis
Dimosthenous, a 50-year-old construction worker who has been without a
job for 10 months. "They've made our daily lives unbearable. If only I
was 10 years younger I'd leave this place."
(Additional reporting by Kevin Lim in Singapore, Writing by Deepa Babington; editing by Janet McBride)
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