Financial Times, 5/6/2015
Greece overturns civil service reforms
by Kerin Hope in Athens

The Greek parliament has approved a law proposed by the leftwing 
Syriza­led government overturning civil service reforms by the previous 
government aimed at streamlining the country’s inefficient public sector.

The legislation, which was passed on Tuesday night, called for the 
rehiring of about 13,000 civil servants whose jobs were cut in an 
overhaul of the public administration agreed with bailout lenders. It 
also eliminated annual evaluations for civil servants and promotions 
based on merit.

Giorgos Katrougalos, the leftwing Syriza­led government’s deputy 
minister for administrative reform, called the measures “a Band­Aid to 
repair the most extreme injustices and restore legality to the system”.

“This is not our last word, it’s the first step of [administrative] 
reforms we’re going to make that won’t be neoliberal but will have a 
social aspect,” he said, without giving details of how his plans to 
increase the public sector payroll would be financed.

The government rejected claims by opposition lawmakers that the 
legislation violated the terms of Greece’s current €172bn bailout which 
requires the country’s government to agree economic measures with 
creditors before presenting them to parliament. “We aren’t going to 
consult the institutions [the EU, the European Commission and the 
International Monetary Fund], we don’t have to, we’re a sovereign 
state,” Nikos Voutsis, the powerful interior minister, told parliament.

The municipal police force, which was disbanded 18 months ago, will be 
revived and several thousand caretakers at state schools, known as 
“guards”, are to be rehired.

Almost 600 women cleaners sacked by the finance ministry as a 
cost­cutting measure are expected to get their jobs back next month. The 
cleaners, who worked at tax offices around the country, have staged a 
round­the­clock sit­in for the past 12 months, occupying a stretch of 
pavement close to the finance ministry building in central Athens after 
they filed a collective lawsuit claiming unfair dismissal.

“I have a great feeling of satisfaction now that our campaign has 
succeeded,” said Anna Chrysikopoulou, a tax office cleaner who said she 
spent several nights a week at the sit­in sleeping in a tent. Mr 
Katrougalos, a lawyer who specialises in labour disputes, has become a 
controversial figure in the government.

He was accused soon after his appointment to the cabinet in January of 
conflict of interest over his involvement in cases of unfair dismissal 
brought by school guards. Mr Katrougalos denied the allegation, saying 
other partners in his law firm were representing the school guards. 
Government officials at the time defended Mr Katrougalos’s appointment 
on the grounds that his legal specialisation qualified him for the 
position.
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