Mayhem in Athens

By Barnaby Phillips
Europe Blog
Al Jazeera
March 5, 2010

http://blogs.aljazeera.net/europe/2010/03/05/mayhem-athens

Athens

As the Greek government pushes ahead with its austerity
programme, demonstrations are almost daily affairs.
And, sometimes, they turn ugly.

Our Athens bureau overlooks the Greek parliament. It's
a fantastic location, in the heart of the city, close
to many important offices and government ministries. It
also gives us a grandstand view of the demonstrations
that frequently wind through the city centre, and end
in parliament square.

These days, as the government pushes ahead with its
austerity programme, the demonstrations are almost
daily affairs. And, sometimes, like today, they turn
ugly.

It was mayhem out there for about half an hour, and we
looked down on demonstrators hurling rocks and bottles
at the police, who responded with volleys of tear gas.
There seem to have been a couple of high-profile
injuries. Greek TV showed union leader Yiannis
Pannagopoulos being punched, apparently by another
member of the crowd. And a prominent figure of the
Greek left, Manolis Glezos, was carried away injured,
apparently after being tear-gassed in the face.

Mr Glezos's first, and arguably greatest claim to fame,
came back in 1941, when he and another student scaled
the Acropolis in the middle of the night and tore down
the Swastika flag, symbol of the hated Nazi occupation.
It was an act of incredible courage, that inspired not
only Greeks, but also people across all of occupied
Europe.

There's a certain irony to Mr Glezos being injured
today, with the war of words that has broken out
between the Greek and German press, much of it alluding
to the Nazi-occupation, (see my earlier blog post,
Don't Mention the War), and even some politicians, and
with the Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou in
Berlin for talks with Angela Merkel about the economic
crisis. A recent piece in the Guardian has a nice
colourful reference to Mr Glezos.

Meanwhile, a couple of important political developments
to watch out for here in Greece; an opinion poll for
the Skai Television Channel suggests, for the first
time, a majority opposed to the new austerity measures.

It's perhaps a little soon to draw any conclusions, but
it's important to watch what "the silent majority" of
Greeks feel. Until now, opinion polls indicated most
Greeks supported the government, and agreed that
drastic measures needed to be taken.

If that is changing, the pressure on the government
will increase. And, another sign that the consensus may
be fraying; the main opposition party, the centre-right
New Democracy, says it does not support the latest
cuts.

The governing PASOK has the numbers in parliament to
push legislation through, (and, indeed, the latest
austerity plan was approved today) but if the cross-
party consensus really is over, then George
Papandreou's position has just become a little bit more
uncomfortable.
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to