Police clashed with protesters outside parliament Wednesday, firing tear gas as they came under attack with firebombs during a massive demonstration against austerity.
An AFP reporter saw some 200 youths attacking a steel barricade erected outside the parliament building as the street protest of some 70,000 people converged on central Syntagma Square in Athens.
A record turnout of more than 125,000 people according to police rallied around the country against a new austerity bill heading for a parliament vote on Thursday.
The attackers also pelted police with refuse littering the city’s streets from a two-week strike by municipal garbage collectors, and smashed a riot police van.
Striking taxi owners in another part of the protest were also sprayed with tear gas and retaliated by throwing bottles at police.
The demonstrations in Athens, Thessaloniki, Patras, Heraklion and other cities were mainly peaceful despite boiling anger against the new wave of cuts imposed on a country already slogging through nearly two years of belt-tightening.
“Today and tomorrow is the greatest general strike, the greatest mobilisation by the Greek people against the unfair, anti-social and ineffective measures brought by the government and its creditors,” said Yiannis Panagopoulos, head of the main union GSEE that represents private sector staff.
Police in some areas added that participation was the highest in a decade.
Authorities in Athens had thrown a cordon of riot police buses and a steel fence in front of parliament and shut down two metro train stations in the area.
Four youths were arrested at the start of the demonstration, police said, with reports saying firebombs were found in their possession.
The government has repeatedly warned that failure to pass the legislation on Thursday ahead of an EU crisis summit on Sunday would prompt Greece’s peers to block the release of loans and cause a payments freeze.
The government is expected to weather the vote, but a number of ruling party deputies have threatened to oppose an amendment to collective wage agreements.
iT IS TO BAD GREECE WENT ON THE EURO IT HAS NOT BEEN GOOD FOR THEM. iT WOULD BE HARD FOR ANYONE TO LOSE THEIR PENSION AND HAVE THEIR WAGES CUT BACK,
THEY ARE IN A DIFFICULT POSITION AND IT IS SAD.
Vasalaki
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