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  • 7
    days
    ago

    Thousands rally in Italy to oppose austerity measures

    Filippo Monteforte / AFP - Getty Images

    Demonstrators applaud during the left-wing Italian metalworkers' union FIOM rally in downtown Rome's Piazza San Giovanni on May 18, 2013.

    By Carmelo Carmilli and Roberto Mignucci, Reuters

    Thousands of people protested in Rome on Saturday against austerity policies and high unemployment, urging new Prime Minister Enrico Letta to focus on creating jobs to help pull the country out of recession.

    "We hope that this government will finally start listening to us because we are losing our patience," said Enzo Bernardis, who joined the sea of protesters waving red flags and calling for more workers' rights and better contracts.

    Less than a month in power, Letta is trying to hold together an uneasy coalition between his center-left Democratic party and the center-right People of Freedom, led by former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi.

    Confidence in the government, cobbled together after inconclusive elections, is already falling, with one poll on Friday by the SWG institute showing its approval rating had dropped to 34 percent from 43 percent at the start of the month.


    "We can't wait anymore" and "We need money to live" were among slogans on banners held up by the crowds.

    Letta promised to make jobs his top priority when he came to power in April after two months of political deadlock. But several protesters complained he was not sticking to his vow, focusing instead on a property tax reform outlined this week.

    Union leaders said he needed to shift away from the austerity agenda pursued by former Prime Minister Mario Monti, who introduced a range of spending cuts, tax hikes and pension reform to shore up strained public finances.

    "We need to start over with more investment. If we don't restart with public and private investments, there will no new jobs," said Maurizio Landini, secretary-general of the left-wing metalworkers union Fiom.

    Italy is stuck in its longest recession since quarterly records began in 1970, and jobless rates are close to record highs, with youth unemployment at around 38 percent.

    Other protesters were pessimistic that Letta's fragile government would be able to take effective action.

    "This government will last a very short time," said demonstrator Marco Silvani. What we need is a new leftist party that fights for the rights of the people," he said.

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    92 comments

    Spend! Spin! Spend! Spin! Coming soon to a capitol near you.

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    Explore related topics: italy, rome, featured, eurozone, austerity, letta
  • 22
    Apr
    2013
    11:51am, EDT

    A 'sign' of the Greek economy

    Alkis Konstantinidis / EPA

    An empty billboard along the main road that encircles the city of Athens, April 3.

    Alkis Konstantinidis / EPA

    Empty billboards line a suburban street of Thessaloniki, Greece, March 3.

    Orestis Panagiotou / EPA

    Empty billboards on a main traffic street of Athens, Greece, March 27.

    Alkis Konstantinidis / EPA

    An empty advertising billboard int the suburbs of Thessaloniki, Greece's second largest city, March 3.

     

    By European PressPhoto Agency -- Just as ancient temples remind humanity of the once great Greek Empire, empty billboards represent Greece’s current situation. They can now be easily found in Greece’s capital, Athens. They are ragged and empty, or else carrying posters so old that the sun has bleached them illegible. 

    At the moment, it is not known if there are plans to remove them so they remain, in a way, monuments of the past, and the message is the absence of message. 

    As turnover in retail trade has dropped by 54.6 per cent since 2009, the advertising companies that own the billboards have suffered greatly from the economic crisis, and in their attempts to reduce operational costs, have slashed their advertising expenses. Data of the Hellenic Statistical Authority show that in the first six months of 2012, the reduction in advertising expenses in total dropped by 29.6 per cent compared to the same period in 2011, a year in which turnover had already been reduced by 15.5 per cent in comparison to 2010. Thousands of employees in the sector are among the 26.5 per cent of the Greeks who are unemployed, while those who are still employed are experiencing harrowing labor conditions, often without complaint, as advertising is one of those sectors that is not represented by its own union.

    Editor's note: Photos were taken in March and April, but made available to NBC News today.

    2 comments

    Looks like pictures of Detroit or Camden, NJ... progressive utopias built on the principle that out of control govt spending is the road to prospericy... sorry, not in Athens, not in Cyprus, not anywhere....

    Show more
    Explore related topics: economy, billboard, austerity, greek-economy, world-news-greece
  • 23
    Feb
    2013
    3:48pm, EST

    Thousands in Spain protest austerity, corruption

    Denis Doyle / Getty Images

    Demonstrators protest on Calle Alcala during a march by thousands of people on Feb. 23, 2013 in Madrid. Public health workers, civil servants and disaffected citizens converged on central Madrid to protest against the austerity measures of Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy.

    By Paul Day, Reuters

    Tens of thousands of Spaniards marched through cities across the country on Saturday to protest deep austerity, the privatization of public services and political corruption.

    Gathering under the banner of the "Citizen Tide," students, doctors, unionists, young families and pensioners staged rowdy but non-violent demonstrations as a near five-year economic slump shows no sign of recovery and mass unemployment rises.


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    "I'm here to add my voice. They're cutting where they shouldn't cut; health, education ... basic services. And the latest corruption scandal is just the tiniest tip of a very large iceberg," said Alberto, 51, an account administrator for a German multinational in Madrid, who preferred not to give his surname.

    Protests in Spain have become commonplace as the conservative government passes measures aimed at shrinking one of the euro zone's highest budget deficits and reinventing an economy hobbled by a burst housing bubble.

    Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy has introduced some of the deepest budget cuts in Spain's democratic history in an attempt to convince investors the country can weather the economic crisis without falling back on international aid.


    But, with more than half of the country's young people out of work and growth not expected until sometime next year, the measures have only scratched the surface of the budget shortfall which is expected to be more than double the target in 2014.

    Cesar Manso / AFP - Getty Images

    Public workers, small political parties and non-profit organizations stage a protest against government austerity on Feb. 23, 2013 in Madrid.

    Meanwhile, corruption scandals that have hit the ruling party as well as the once-popular royal family has left many Spaniards disenchanted with their leaders on all sides of the political spectrum.

    In Madrid, under a clear, cold winter sky, Saturday's marches convened from four different points by early evening in Neptune Square, between the heavily policed and barricaded parliament, the Ritz Hotel and the stock exchange.

    Carrying placards that condemned everything from cuts in the health sector to massive bailouts granted to Spain's banking system, crowds banged drums and chanted, while dozens of riot police stood on the sidelines.

    The march coincided with the anniversary of a failed coup attempt in 1981 by Civil Guard officers who stormed Parliament and held deputies hostage until the next day.

    Related:

    Spanish king's son-in-law in court over tax fraud allegations

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    269 comments

    The "greedy" are the Progressives. Mr. "Drama" Obama's agenda: Tax Spend Redistribute (and now more American taxpayer dollars to poor countries via the IMF) And a lot more REGULATIONS via Executive Orders or by Progressive Cabinet members' regulation changes.

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    Explore related topics: spain, protests, featured, eurozone, austerity
  • 20
    Feb
    2013
    6:33pm, EST

    Thousands of Greeks rally in anti-austerity strike

    Giorgos Moutafis / Reuters

    Protesters march during a 24-hour strike in Athens, Feb. 20, 2013. Tens of thousands of Greeks took to the streets of Athens on Wednesday during a nationwide strike against wage cuts and high taxes that kept ferries stuck in ports, schools shut and hospitals with only emergency staff.

    By Renee Maltezou and Lefteris Papadimas, Reuters

    Tens of thousands of Greeks took to the streets of Athens on Wednesday as part of a nationwide strike against austerity that confined ferries to ports, shut schools and left hospitals with only emergency staff.

    Beating drums, blowing whistles and chanting, "Robbers, robbers!" more than 60,000 people angry at wage cuts and tax rises marched to parliament in the biggest protest for months over austerity policies required by international lenders.

    In the capital, riot police fired tear gas at hooded youths hurling rocks and bottles during a demonstration, mostly of students and pensioners, which ended peacefully.


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    The two biggest labor unions brought much of crisis-hit Greece to a standstill with a 24-hour protest strike against policies they say deepen the hardship of people struggling through the country's worst peacetime downturn.

    Representing 2.5 million workers, the unions have gone on strike repeatedly since a debt crisis erupted in late 2009, testing the government's will to impose the painful conditions of an international bailout in the face of growing public anger.

    "Today's strike is a new effort to get rid of the bailout deal and those who take advantage of the people and bring only misery," said Ilias Iliopoulos, secretary general of the ADEDY public sector union, which organized the walkout along with private sector union GSEE.

    "A social explosion is very near," he told Reuters from a rally in a central Athens square as police helicopters clattered overhead.

    The eight-month-old coalition of Prime Minister Antonis Samaras has been eager to show it will implement reforms promised to the European Union and International Monetary Fund, which have bailed Athens out twice with over 200 billion euros.

    The government has cracked down on striking workers, invoking emergency laws twice this year to get seamen and subway workers back to work after week-long walkouts that paralyzed public transport in Athens and led to food shortages on islands.

    Demonstrations were also held in Greece's second-biggest city, Thessaloniki, and on the island of Crete where dozens of protesters hit the streets waving black flags.

    In Athens, crowds began to disperse from Syntagma Square outside parliament, but minor clashes between riot police and hooded youths moved to sidestreets.

    Labor unrest has picked up in recent weeks. A visit by French President Francois Hollande in Athens on Tuesday went largely unreported because Greek journalists were on strike.

    "The period of virtual euphoria is over," said opposition leader Alexis Tsipras, whose Syriza party has regained a narrow opinion poll lead over the governing conservatives.

    "Those who thought Samaras would renegotiate the terms of the bailout ... are now faced with the harsh reality of unpaid bills, closed shops and lost jobs," he said.

    Under pressure
    Anger at politicians and the wealthy elite has been boiling during the crisis, with many accusing the government of making deep cuts to wages and pensions while doing too little to spread the burden or go after rich tax evaders.

    "This government needs to look out for us poor people as well because we can't take it any more," said Niki Lambopoulou, a 43-year-old insurance broker and single mother.

    "I work night and day to make ends meet and the government is killing our children's dreams."

    In a sign it may be buckling under pressure, the government announced on Monday it would not fire almost 1,900 civil servants earmarked for possible dismissal, despite promising foreign lenders it would seek to cut the public payroll.

    "The strike highlights the growing gap between the plight of ordinary Greeks and the demands of Greece's international creditors," said Martin Koehring, analyst at the Economist Intelligence Unit, forecasting more social unrest this year.

    Greece secured bailout funds in December, ending months of uncertainty over the country's future in the euro zone, and analysts said this had created expectations among Greeks that things would improve for them personally.

    "If these expectations are not satisfied by the summer, then whatever is left of the working class will respond with more protests," said Costas Panagopoulos, head of Alco pollsters.

    Six years of recession and three of austerity have tripled the rate of unemployment to 27 percent. More than 60 percent of young workers are jobless.

    Most business and public sector activity came to a halt with schoolteachers, train drivers and doctors among those joining the strike. Banks pulled down their shutters and ships stayed docked as seamen defied government orders to return to work.

    "I'm on the brink of going hungry. My life is misery," said Eleni Nikolaou, 60, a civil servant who supports her unemployed brother on her reduced wage. "If this government had any dignity it would resign. I want them to leave, leave, leave."

     

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    18 comments

    Of course they are striking. These are the same ignorant people that voted for fiscal policies that bankrupted the country. Now it is time to pay for their mistakes and they are complaining. The bottom line is that they ran out of money. End of story.

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    Explore related topics: strike, greece, athens, featured, austerity
  • 20
    Feb
    2013
    9:36am, EST

    Bulgarian government resigns after power prices cause riots

    Vassil Donev / EPA

    Demonstrators throw stones at riot police during a protest in Sofia, Bulgaria, on Tuesday. Eleven people were hospitalized and 11 arrested. The protest, spurred by anger over high gas prices and austerity measures in the impoverished country, appeared to be the last straw for Prime Minister Boiko Borisov, who announced Wednesday that he and his rightist party would resign.

    By Sam Cage and Tsvetelia Tsolova, Reuters

    SOFIA, Bulgaria -- Bulgaria's government resigned Wednesday after violent nationwide protests against high power prices, joining a long list of European administrations felled by austerity during Europe's debt crisis.

    Prime Minister Boiko Borisov, a former bodyguard who swept to power in 2009 on pledges to root out corruption and raise living standards in the European Union's poorest nation, now faces a tough task to prop up eroding support ahead of a probable early election.

    Wage and pension freezes and tax hikes have bitten deeply in a country where living standards are less than half the EU average. Tens of thousands of Bulgarians have rallied in protests that have turned violent, chanting "Mafia" and "resign."

    AFP - Getty Images

    Bulgarian Prime Minister Boyko Borisov, right, leaves the parliament building in Sofia on Wednesday after announcing his government's resignation.

    On Tuesday, 11 people were hospitalized and 11 arrested after protesters threw flares at police, who fought demonstrators with shields and truncheons.

    "I will not participate in a government under which police are beating people," Borisov, who began his career guarding the Black Sea state's communist dictator Todor Zhivkov, said as he announced his resignation on Wednesday.

    Parliament was expected to accept the resignation later in the day.

    The spark for the protests was high electricity bills, after the government raised prices by 13 percent last July. But it quickly spilled over into wider frustration with Borisov's domineering manner and unpredictable decision-making.

    The prime minister made sacrifices in an attempt to cling on, firing his finance minister, cutting power prices and risking a diplomatic feud with the Czech Republic by punishing foreign-owned companies, a move that conflicted with EU norms on protection of investors and due process.

    Borisov's rightist party, Citizens for European Development of Bulgaria, or GERB, is the dominant faction in parliament but will not take part in talks to form a new government, Interior Minister Tsvetan Tsvetanov said, indicating that an election planned for July will now be held early.

    "He made my day," student Borislav Hadzhiev, 21, in central Sofia said, said about Borisov's resignation. "The truth is that we're living in an extremely poor country."

    GERB's popularity has held up well and it still leads, barely, in the polls, largely because budget cutbacks have been relatively mild compared with those in many other European countries. Salaries and pensions were frozen rather than cut.

    But the last opinion poll, taken before protests grew last weekend, showed the opposition socialists were nearly tied with the ruling party, and analysts said the protests had boosted the socialists' chances.

    Unemployment in the country of 7.3 million is far from the highs hit in the decade after the end of communist rule but remains at 11.9 percent, and average salaries are stuck at around $550 a month.

    Millions have emigrated in search of a better life, leaving large parts of the country depopulated and little hope for those who remain.

    Related:

    UK prime minister pledges to hold referendum on quitting EU

    Violence breaks out amid austerity protests in Europe

    Extreme right strengthens as Greek economy sinks

     

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    21 comments

    If it were only that easy to get a Government to resign...

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    Explore related topics: europe, bulgaria, featured, austerity, boiko-borisov, government-resigns, gerb
  • 25
    Jan
    2013
    1:32am, EST

    Greek riot police break up striking subway workers' sit-in

    By Karolina Tagaris, Reuters

    ATHENS - Greek riot police stormed a subway train depot in Athens early on Friday to disperse striking subway staff who defied a government order to return to work for a ninth consecutive day, a police official said.

    Scuffles broke out when police forced their way through a metal gate shortly after 4 a.m. (0200 GMT) and detained at least 10 workers, the official said on condition of anonymity. One woman was taken to hospital with light injuries, he added.

    The escalating standoff has turned into the latest test for Greece's fragile coalition as it faces down the unions to implement austerity measures demanded by foreign lenders as the price for bailout funds.


    Subway workers have ignored the order, issued under emergency legislation by the conservative-led government on Thursday, paralyzing the Athens subway in a week-long walkout.

    About 90 workers stayed at the train depot overnight in protest. The subway workers, who have defied a court order to return to work, oppose being included in a unified wage scheme for public sector workers that would slash their salaries.

    Bus and railway workers are joining the walkout on Friday in solidarity.

    Under the emergency law, workers can face arrest and up to five years in jail. No arrests have been made so far, the official said. 

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    2 comments

    Oh the poor little subway babies don't want to have their pay and benefits cut and would rather see their country economically collapse. They rather everyone else feel the pain but them. I hope they all lose their jobs so that those who have been out of work for a while can take them and be happy to …

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    Explore related topics: strike, subway, greece, transit, riot, austerity
  • 10
    Dec
    2012
    6:16am, EST

    Nobel award recognizes Europe as 'continent of peace'

    Suzanne Plunkett / Reuters

    European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso, left, European Council President Herman van Rompuy and European Parliament President Martin Schulz, seen here on Sunday, will receive the Nobel Peace Prize on behalf of the European Union in Oslo on Monday.

    By NBC News wire services

    Updated at 9:20 a.m. ET: OSLO, Norway -- The European Union received the Nobel Peace Prize on Monday, as the Norwegian committee looked beyond Europe's current malaise to recognize its decades of stability and democracy after the horrors of two world wars.

    Fittingly for an institution with no single leader, the EU sent three of its presidents to the Oslo ceremony for the 2012 prize, which critics including former Nobel laureate Desmond Tutu say is undeserved.

    About 20 European government leaders, including German Chancellor Angela Merkel, French President Francois Hollande and British Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg, also attended the ceremony.

    "Sixty years of peace. It's the first time that this has happened in the long history of Europe," Herman Van Rompuy, the president of the European Council, said before the ceremony.

    "The facts prove that the European Union is a peacekeeping instrument of the first order," said Van Rompuy, who was on hand to collect the prize along with European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso and Martin Schulz, the president of the European Parliament.

    The EU has been awarded the Nobel Prize for its role in uniting the continent after two World Wars.  ITV's  James Mates reports.

    Two Americans win Nobel for work on matching different economic agents


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    Economic pain
    Europe is suffering feeble economic growth or outright recession, soaring unemployment and a number of its member states are unable to pay their debts. It has been called the worst economic crisis since World War II.

    The economic pain has provoked social unrest in a number of member states, notably near-bankrupt Greece.

    However, the Nobel committee focused on the EU's role in reconciling the disparate, warring corners of the "old continent" -- the overarching success being to turn Germany and France from enemies into allies.

    From just six countries that agreed to pool their coal and steel production in the 1950s to 27 member states today -- and 28 once Croatia joins next year -- the EU now stretches from Portugal to Romania, Finland to Malta and sets rules and regulations that have a bearing on more than 500 million people.

    "The stabilizing part played by the EU has helped to transform most of Europe from a continent of war to a continent of peace," the Nobel committee said on Oct. 12 when it announced the EU had won, an unexpected decision.

    Complete coverage of Europe on NBCNews.com

    The prize money of $1.25 million will be given to projects that help children struggling in war zones, with the recipients to be announced next week. The EU has said it will match the prize money, doubling the sum to be given to selected aid projects.

    The awarding of the prize to the EU has provoked criticism from some quarters.

    Complete World coverage on NBCNews.com

    Three Peace Prize laureates -- Tutu, Mairead Maguire of Northern Ireland and Adolfo Perez Esquivel from Argentina -- have demanded that prize money of $1.2 million not be paid this year. They said the bloc contradicts the values associated with the prize because it relies on military force to ensure security.

    Amnesty International said Monday that EU leaders should not "bask in the glow of the prize," warning that xenophobia and intolerance are now on the rise in Europe.

    The Nobel Peace Prize is awarded each year in Oslo on Dec. 10, the anniversary of Alfred Nobel's death in 1896. Similar ceremonies are to be held in the Swedish capital, Stockholm, for the Nobel laureates in medicine, chemistry, physics and literature.

    The decision to award the Nobel Peace Prize to the EU was met with confusion among those who have witnessed Europe's economic crisis, and deep unrest. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    27 comments

    Nobel Peace Prize!? Why because the Germans have not invaded France lately? I think I recently remember some EU members dropping a few bombs in Libya. Not to mention a few Europeans in Iraq and Afghanistan.

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    Explore related topics: nobel, europe, stockholm, european-union, featured, oslo, austerity
  • 15
    Nov
    2012
    9:54am, EST

    Greek protesters pelt German diplomat with water bottles, coffee

    Nikolas Giakoumidis/AP

    A protester, not seen, throws a coffee at German consul Wolfgang Hoelscher-Obermaier, with the blue shirt, in Thessaloniki Thursday.

    By Reuters

    ATHENS - Public sector workers stormed a building where Greek and German officials were meeting in the northern city of Thessaloniki Thursday and pelted a German diplomat with water bottles in a protest over austerity measures.

    Riot police used teargas and truncheons to break up a crowd of 250 city employees outside the building and formed a shield around German Consul Wolfgang Hoelscher-Obermaier as he entered.

    Photographs also showed coffee being thrown over Hoelscher-Obermaier.


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    Protesters chanted "It's now or never!" and held up mock gravestones and banners proclaiming "Fight until the end!"

    They said they were furious at comments by German envoy Hans-Joachim Fuchtel, who told journalists on Wednesday that Greece could do more to reform its bloated local government sector, the head of the workers' union said.

    "Experts say that as far as local government is concerned the work carried out by 3,000 Greek employees can be done by 1,000 Germans," Fuchtel said. On Thursday, he said his remarks had been misinterpreted.

    Anger and sometimes violent protests have been staged across Europe against unemployment and austerity measures.  ITN's Emma Murphy reports. 

    Violence breaks out amid austerity protests in Europe

    Fuchtel was appointed by German Chancellor Angela Merkel late last year to explore ways to boost grassroots cooperation between the two countries, and has been lampooned as overbearing in Greek media.

    His comments struck a nerve in Greece at a time when its lenders, the European Union and International Monetary Fund, have demanded layoffs and steep spending cuts in exchange for a second $165 billion bailout.

    More photos: Demonstrations across Europe over austerity measures

    At the Thessaloniki city hall, a woman who answered the switchboard phone said: "No one can talk to you now. They have occupied the building."

    A spokesman for the German Foreign Ministry said: "No one was hurt and there was no material damage. The meeting continues as planned and that's what's important."

    Garbage piles
    Municipal employees have held several nationwide protests and strikes in recent weeks against the new wave of budget cuts, triggering severe disruptions in public transport and causing garbage to pile up across the capital.

    The head of the POE-OTA union of municipal workers, Themis Balasopoulos, said Fuchtel's comments showed the government planned to push ahead with controversial public sector layoffs, about 2,000 of which are scheduled by the end of the year.

    Read more coverage from NBC News about Europe's austerity troubles

    Unions and some politicians oppose the layoffs, which are mainly expected to target local government workers.

    "We are here to express our deep anger at his absurd comments," Balasopoulos told Reuters from the protest in Thessaloniki.

    "We are not a democracy -- we are under German supervision. If we had decent politicians they would have put him on a plane last night and sent him back home," he said.

    Many Greeks, worn down by years of austerity, blame Merkel for forcing the painful cuts in exchange for the bailouts.

    In Germany, media have long characterized the Mediterranean state's 11 million people as lazy, corrupt and ungrateful.

    Tens of thousands of Greeks protested against a visit by Merkel to Athens in October and some burned Nazi flags. 

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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    16 comments

    Apparently these Greek public sector workers have never heard the adage, "Don't bite the hand that feeds you."

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    Explore related topics: business, germany, economy, world, strikes, euro, greece, featured, eurozone, austerity, commentid-greece
  • 14
    Nov
    2012
    6:59am, EST

    Violence breaks out amid austerity protests in Europe

    Anger and sometimes violent protests have been staged across Europe against unemployment and austerity measures.  ITN's Emma Murphy reports. 


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld
    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    Updated at 9:05 a.m. ET: Pockets of violence broke out as public demonstrations and strikes over rising unemployment and austerity measures took place in many parts of Europe Wednesday.

    Spanish and Portuguese workers staged a coordinated general strike across the Iberian Peninsula, shutting transport, grounding flights and closing schools to protest against spending cuts and tax hikes.

    International rail services were disrupted by strikes in Belgium and workers in Greece, Italy and France planned work stoppages or demonstrations as part of a "European Day of Action and Solidarity.”

    Hundreds of flights -- including those between southern Europe and connection hubs such as London Heathrow, Paris Charles de Gaulle and Amsterdam Schiphol -- were also canceled.

    NOVEMBER 7: Greece's government has approved another round of deep cuts to spending, wages and pensions, which sparked fierce clashes between police and protesters. ITV's James Mates reports.

    More than 60 people were arrested in Spain and 34 injured, 18 of them security officials after scuffles at picket lines and damage to storefronts, Reuters reported. Riot police arrested at least two protesters in Madrid and hit others with batons, witnesses said.

    Protesters jammed cash machines with glue and coins and plastered anti-government stickers on shop windows. Power consumption dropped 16 percent with factories idled.

    More photos: Demonstrations across Europe over austerity measures

    In Italy, students pelted police with rocks in a protest in Rome over money-saving plans for the school system. The windows of a bank in Milan were reportedly smashed by protesting students, according to a report on the website of the U.K.’s Guardian newspaper.

    In Greece, state workers, holding banners reading "Enough is Enough," started rallying on several squares in central Athens on Wednesday morning.

    See more coverage of this story at ITV News

    Yves Herman / Reuters

    A passenger waits on an empty platform at the Thalys high-speed train terminal at Brussels Midi/Zuid rail station amid strikes across Europe Wednesday.

    The international coordination shows "we are looking at a historic moment in the European Union movement," said Fernando Toxo, head of Spain's biggest union, Comisiones Obreras.

    Spain, where one in four workers is unemployed, is now teetering on the brink of calling for a bailout from the European Union, with Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy trying to put off a rescue that could require even more EU-mandated budget cuts.

    Passion has been further inflamed since last week when a Spanish woman jumped from her apartment to her death as bailiffs tried to evict her when her bank foreclosed on a loan. Spaniards are furious at banks being rescued with public cash while ordinary people suffer.

    SEPTEMBER: Day two of demonstrations in Madrid as protesters clash with police outside parliament over new austerity measures. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    "We're going to protest because they're ignoring people's rights. People are being evicted and they're raising our taxes," said Sandra Gonzalez, 19, a social work student at Madrid's Complutense University who plans to march with friends.

    ITV News reporter James Mates posted a picture on Twitter of a deserted station in central Madrid.

    Madrid's main station completely deserted at height of rush hour this morning. Nothing moving #GeneralStrike twitter.com/jamesmatesitv/������¢���¯���¿���½������¦

    — James Mates (@jamesmatesitv) November 14, 2012

    In Portugal, which accepted an EU bailout last year, the streets have been quieter so far, but public and political opposition to austerity is mounting, threatening to derail new measures sought by Prime Minister Pedro Passos Coelho. His policies were held up this week as a model by Germany's Angela Merkel, a hate figure in crisis-hit southern European countries.

    A strike organized by CGTP in March had little impact, but in September hundreds of thousands of Portuguese rallied against a government plan to raise workers' social security contributions.

    "The first-ever Iberian strike" would be "a great signal of discontent and also a warning to European authorities," said Armenio Carlos, head of Portugal's CGTP union which is organizing the action there.

    Unions have planned rallies and marches in cities throughout both countries, with a major demonstration beginning at 6:30 p.m. (12:30 p.m. ET) in Madrid.

    Some 5 million people, or 22 percent of the workforce, are union members in Spain. In Portugal about one fourth of the 5.5 million-strong workforce is unionized.

    "This austerity is a never-ending story. We see no light at the end of the end of the tunnel, just more pain and difficulties. We have to protest, do something to stop it," said Lisbon pensioner Jose Marques, who planned to march Wednesday.

    AFP - Getty Images

    Demonstrators march in Rome, Italy, as protests and strikes over austerity measures were held by people across Europe Wednesday.

    ITV News is the U.K. partner of NBC News. Reuters contributed to this report.

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    108 comments

    "This austerity is a never-ending story. We see no light at the end of the end of the tunnel, just more pain and difficulties. We have to protest, do something to stop it," said Lisbon pensioner Jose Marques, who planned to march Wednesday.

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  • 7
    Nov
    2012
    3:15pm, EST

    Firebombs, teargas fly as anti-austerity rally turns violent in Greece

    Greece's government has approved another round of deep cuts to spending, wages and pensions, which sparked fierce clashes between police and protestors. ITV's James Mates reports. 

    By Reuters

     


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Updated at 5:25 p.m. ET

    ATHENS — Greek police fired teargas and water cannons at protesters hurling firebombs outside parliament on Wednesday in one of the biggest rallies in months against the cuts the country needed to secure aid and avert bankruptcy.

    A majority of lawmakers passed the unpopular austerity and labor reform bill, even as the rally attended by about 100,000 disintegrated into violence, with protesters and riot police fighting running battles in Syntagma Square.

    Earlier, chaos reigned inside the assembly, where the session was briefly interrupted when parliamentary workers went on strike to protest a clause that would have cut their salaries. In a humiliating about-face, the government was forced to cancel the measure to allow the session to resume.


    Outside, loud booms rang out as protesters hurled firebombs and rocks at police, who responded with teargas, stun grenades and water cannons — the first time they had been used in an anti-austerity protest. Billowing smoke and small fires could be seen on a street next to parliament.

    The violence erupted as a handful of protesters tried to break through a barricade to enter parliament, where Prime Minister Antonis Samaras is expected to scrape a win for the belt-tightening measures despite opposition from within his coalition.

    CNBC's Michelle Caruso-Cabrera reports that new austerity measures being voted on in Greece are causing a market selloff as rioters hit the streets.

    Earlier in the evening, Greeks outside the parliament in a downpour held flags and banners saying, "It's them or us!" and "End this disaster!"

    Protesters — some chanting "Fight! They're drinking our blood" — packed the square and side streets in one of the largest rallies seen in months.

     

    Some held aloft huge Italian, Portuguese and Spanish flags in solidarity with other nations enduring austerity.

    "These measures are killing us little by little and lawmakers in there don't give a damn," said Maria Aliferopoulou, a 52-year-old mother of two living on 1,000 euros a month.

    "They are rich, they have everything and we have nothing and are fighting for crumbs, for survival."

    Public transport was halted, schools, banks and government offices were shut and garbage piled up on streets on the second day of a two-day national strike against the cuts.

    Watch World News videos on NBCNews.com 

    Backed by the leftist opposition, unions say the measures will hit the poor and spare the wealthy, while deepening a five-year recession that has wiped out a fifth of the country's output and driven unemployment to a record 25 percent.

    The cuts and tax hikes expected to be worth 13.5 billion euros are required to unlock a loan tranche of more than 31 billion euros ($40 billion) from the European Union and International Monetary Fund bailout.

    Dimitri Messinis / AP

    A riot police officer is engulfed by petrol bomb flames thrown by protesters in front of the parliament during clashes in Athens, Wednesday Nov. 7, 2012.

    The vote is the biggest test for Samaras's government since it came to power in June. A 'yes' will give Athens cash to shore up its ailing banks and pay off debt due later this month.

    EU Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn called on the Greek parliament to do its part in securing its next tranche of bailout aid by passing the measures.

    But protesters outside said they were on the brink.

    "You live in constant fear and uncertainty. You never know what's waiting for you around the corner," said Panos Goutsis, 58, who works in a small corner shop in Athens.

    "How many times will they tell us these are the last measures? We're sick of hearing it."

    Greeks have been angered by the relaxed approach consecutive governments have taken towards catching tax cheats, with many saying officials have dragged their feet on investigations to protect a wealthy elite.

    Following the publication last month of a list of more than 2,000 wealthy Greeks with Swiss bank accounts, the Swiss government said on Wednesday it was hoping to clinch a swift deal with Athens on taxing secret holdings.

    The austerity measures being debated in parliament are accompanied by steps to make it easier for businesses to hire and fire workers.

    PhotoBlog: Striking Greeks clash with police

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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    150 comments

    Now that the election is over, welcome to the real world, America!

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  • 20
    Oct
    2012
    6:27am, EDT

    Nurses, cleaners, librarians: UK austerity marchers challenge government cuts

    Dan Kitwood / Getty Images

    A man holds up a banner reading 'Austerity - That's Enough' as a march to protest the government's austerity measures prepares to set off from the Embankment in London on Friday.

    By NBC News staff and wires reports

    Updated at 8:25 a.m ET: LONDON - Thousands of anti-austerity protesters marched in London on Saturday to protest against public spending cuts enacted by a government fighting off accusations that it is run by an upper-class elite that ignores the plight of recession-hit voters. 

    The march comes at a time when Prime Minister David Cameron's Conservative-led coalition is reeling from the resignation on Friday of a senior minister accused of calling police "plebs," a class-laden insult for working people. 


    Conservatives faced a barrage of negative headlines on Saturday over the departure of Andrew Mitchell, the "Chief Whip" or party enforcer, four weeks after he swore at police guarding the gates to Cameron's Downing Street office. 

    Class wars: 'Gate-gate' scandal swamps UK PM David Cameron


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    A second row involving George Osborne, the finance minister -- who sat in a first class train carriage with a standard class ticket before paying for an upgrade -- played into the hands of critics who say the Conservatives are privileged and out-of-touch. 

    "Who Do They Think They Are?" asked the Daily Mail newspaper in a front page headline, while the Financial Times said the bad news over Mitchell and Osborne capped a "dismal week for the Tories", the center-right party that is trailing in the polls. 

    Nurses, cleaners, librarians and ambulance drivers are among tens of thousands marching past the Houses of Parliament to a rally in Hyde Park in one of the biggest anti-austerity protests this year. Marches will also take place in Belfast, Northern Ireland, and Glasgow, Scotland. 

    General strike?
    Under grey autumnal skies, police closed roads around parliament in Westminster before the start of the march at 1100 GMT (6 a.m. ET). 

    Trade union leaders are seeking to pile more pressure on Cameron at the event where they will tell protesters that the government's economic plan has failed, prolonging Britain's second recession since the financial crisis. 

    Greek strike turns violent: 'Enough is enough'

    The head of the head of the RMT transport workers union was set to say that Saturday's march was a step towards a nationwide strike, Sky News reported.

    "The marches are a building block towards the objective of coordinated action and a general strike.  That is why RMT says, march today, strike tomorrow," Bob Crow was planning to say, Sky News reported without citing a source.

    Reuters reported that Brendan Barber, head of the Trades Union Congress, an umbrella group which represents 54 unions, planned to say the following:

    "Austerity isn't working. It is hammering the poorest and the most vulnerable ... Ministers told us that if we only accept the pain, recovery would come. Instead we have been mired in a double-dip recession." 

    Coalition under pressure
    The coalition government has responded to calls from unions and the opposition Labour Party to do more to boost growth by relaxing planning laws and boosting lending to businesses. 

    A downsized parade as Spain's celebrates national day amidst austerity cuts

    But its latest attempt to ease the pressure on squeezed households backfired this week when Cameron said the government would legislate to force energy companies to give customers their lowest tariff. The surprise announcement appeared to take his own ministers by surprise and sowed confusion over what he meant and whether it would actually happen. 

    However, Sajid Javid, a Conservative Treasury minister, said the government was right to focus on cutting borrowing and that data last week indicating a fall in unemployment and inflation showed that its economic policies were on track. 

    "There is a still a lot to do," he told Sky News. "I don't pretend for a second that we are out of the woods, but this government is facing up to the problem, it is not sticking its head in the sand like (Labour opposition leader) Ed Miliband." 

    Asked about the perception that the Conservatives are out of touch, he said: "I think that what matters is what is actually happening out there in the real world." 

    Spain, Portugal hit with anti-austerity protests

    Opponents of the unions say the government should stick to its plan to eliminate a budget deficit that stood at 8 percent of gross domestic product last year, the biggest of any major European country. 

    "The government must not listen to militant union leaders," said Mark Littlewood, director general of the Institute of Economic Affairs, which describes itself as an independent free-market thinktank. "The cuts we have seen are tiny and further concessions to these protesters would be wholly unaffordable." 

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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    482 comments

    Austerity cuts are amazing and coming to America.

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    Explore related topics: march, unions, osborne, uk, featured, cameron, tuc, austerity
  • 18
    Oct
    2012
    12:48pm, EDT

    General strike in Greece turns violent: 'Enough is enough,' says austerity protester

    Orestis Panagiotou / EPA

    Workers shout slogans in front of the Greek Parliament during a general strike in Athens, Greece on Thursday. Greek trade unions called a 24-hour general strike to oppose new austerity measures.

    By NBC News and wire services

    ATHENS - Greek police clashed with anti-austerity protesters hurling stones and gasoline bombs on the day of a general strike that brought much of the near-bankrupt country to a standstill.

    In the second major walkout in three weeks on Thursday, almost 40,000 protesters marched in Athens in a bid to show EU leaders meeting in Brussels that new wage and pension cuts will only worsen their plight after five years of recession.

    Tensions mounted when a small group of protesters began throwing pieces of marble, bottles and gas bombs at police barricading part of the square in front of parliament, prompting riot police to fire several rounds of teargas to disperse them.

    Thanassis Stavrakis / AP

    Protesters throw gas bombs at riot police officers during a 24-hour nationwide general strike in Athens on Thursday.

    A 65-year old protester died of a heart attack, hospital sources told Reuters. Greek media, however, were reporting the man was tear-gassed, the BBC’s correspondent in Athens, Mark Lowen reported.

    Another three people were injured. Police detained about 50 protesters suspected of attacking them.

    Most business and public sector activity ground to a halt at the start of the 24-hour strike called by the country's two biggest labor unions, ADEDY and GSEE.

    Thanassis Stavrakis / AP

    Protesters clash with riot police in Athens, during a 24-hour nationwide general strike on Thursday. Greece was facing its second general strike in a month Thursday as workers protested over another batch of austerity measures that are designed to prevent the bankruptcy of the country.

    PhotoBlog: Striking Greeks clash with police

    "Enough is enough. They've dug our graves, shoved us in and we are waiting for the priest to read the last words," said Konstantinos Balomenos, a 58-year-old worker at a water utility whose wage has been halved to 900 euros and who has two unemployed sons.

    It was the third time since late September that tens of thousands of Greeks have taken to the streets holding banners and chanting slogans to show their anger at austerity policies imposed by EU and IMF lenders in exchange for aid.

    Thousands of Greeks protest Angela Merkel visit

    Riot police use tear gas and stun grenades in response to fire bombs and bottles thrown by protesters during a demonstration against austerity cuts in Greece. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    Some were carrying Greek, Spanish and Portuguese flags and shouted: "EU, IMF out".

    "Agreeing to catastrophic measures means driving society to despair and the consequences as well as the protests will then be indefinite," said Yannis Panagopoulos, head of the GSEE private sector union, one of two major unions that represent about 2 million people, or half of Greece's workforce.

    Greece is stuck in its worst downturn since World War Two and must make at least 11.5 billion euros of cuts to satisfy the "troika" of the European Commission, European Central Bank and IMF, and secure the next tranche of a 130-billion-euro bailout.

    Lenders demand austerity
    European Union leaders will try to bridge their differences over plans for a banking union at a two-day summit which starts on Thursday. No substantial decisions are expected, reviving concerns about complacency in tackling the debt crisis which exploded three years ago in Greece. 

    Christine Lagarde, IMF managing director, says she would rather have a difficult, yet a credible program for Greece.

    The austerity policies being pursued in Europe's indebted Mediterranean countries at the behest of Germany and other rich euro zone members will drive the euro apart, protesters warned.

    "This can't go on. We sure need measures but not as tough as the ones (German Chancellor Angela) Merkel is asking for," said Dimitris Mavronassos, a 40-year-old shipyard worker who has not been paid for six months.

    The strike emptied streets and offices in Athens. Ships stayed in port, Athens public transport was disrupted and hospitals were working with emergency staff, while public offices, ministries, bakeries and other shops were shut.

    Newspaper kiosk owners, lawyers, taxi drivers and air traffic controllers were among those protesting over the cuts, which include further drastic reductions in welfare and health spending.

    Rising anger
    Opinion polls show rising anger with the terms of the bailout keeping the economy afloat, and Greeks becoming increasingly pessimistic about their country's future. 

    "The new, painful package should not be passed," the ADEDY public sector union said in a statement.

    "The new demands will only finish off what's left of our labor, pension and social rights."

    But with Greece due to run out of money next month, Athens has little choice but to push through the austerity package being discussed with lenders.

    Greece and inspectors from the troika say they have agreed on most issues. Athens is expected to secure aid needed to avoid bankruptcy given EU determination to avoid fresh market turmoil threatening bigger economies such as Spain and Italy.

    But the protests are expected to increase pressure on Greece's fragile three-party coalition cobbled together in June to implement the harsh austerity terms under its international 130-billion euro bailout agreed in March.

    Emboldened by the strikes, the main opposition Syriza party turned up the heat on the government.

    "Their time is running out," said the party's 38-year old leader Alexis Tsipras who took part in the march.

    "People are taking matters into their own hands."

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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    71 comments

    Coming to America We have monthly Hundred billion dollar deficits. M O N T H L Y $100,000,000,000.00 deficits. We loose $25 billion dollars a week.

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