Sph Website
 
THE AWARD-WINNING WEBSITE: BEST IN ONLINE MEDIA (GOLD) - WAN-IFRA ASIA DIGITAL MEDIA AWARDS 2012
Singapore weather
25 °C
 -
33°C
 

Greece faces anti-austerity shutdown as EU meets

 
Published on Oct 18, 2012
6:27 AM
Lawyers and doctors scuffle with riot police during an anti-austerity protest outside the Finance Ministry in Athens, Wednesday, Oct 17, 2012.  Greek workers will walk off the job for the second time in three weeks on Thursday, hoping to show European Union (EU) leaders meeting in Brussels that a new wave of wage and pension cuts will only worsen the plight of a people worn down by five years of recession. -- PHOTO: AP

ATHENS (REUTERS) - Greek workers will walk off the job for the second time in three weeks on Thursday, hoping to show European Union (EU) leaders meeting in Brussels that a new wave of wage and pension cuts will only worsen the plight of a people worn down by five years of recession.

Mired in its worst downturn since World War II, Greece is preparing 11.5 billion euros (S$18.3 billion) of cuts to satisfy the "troika" of the European Commission, European Central Bank and IMF, and secure the next installment of its 130-billion-euro bailout.

"Just once, the government ought to reject the troika's absurd demands," said Yannis Panagopoulos, head of the General Confederation of Greek Workers (GSEE) private sector union, one of two major unions that represent about 2 million people, or half of Greece's workforce.

"Agreeing to catastrophic measures means driving society to despair and the consequences as well as the protests will then be indefinite," he said.

TO READ THE FULL STORY...

 
comments powered by Disqus