WSJ, May 11, 2015
Greek Government Agrees to Rehire Cleaners
After a 20-month-long protest of layoffs, cleaners declare a victory 
that Greece’s creditors see as an affront
By STELIOS BOURAS

ATHENS—At a makeshift protest camp near Greece’s Finance Ministry, a 
group of cleaning women punched rubber-gloved fists in the air on Monday 
to celebrate what they see as victory over mighty Germany and the 
International Monetary Fund.

Laid off from government cleaning jobs under Greece’s austerity program, 
the women’s nearly two-year full-time vigil has moved the leftist-led 
government to give them their jobs back—in defiance of the country’s 
creditors.

The German-led lenders see nothing to celebrate. Viewed from Berlin and 
Brussels, the move to rehire the 595 cleaners and thousands of other 
laid-off government workers is a rollback of economic reforms suggesting 
that Greece, now ruled by the left-wing Syriza party, isn’t sticking to 
its austerity commitments.

The cleaners agree, and welcome the prospect.

“It is a small victory that paves the way for bigger ones,” said 
Evagelia Alexaki, a 58-year-old cleaner who has been active at the 
live-in protest camp in central Athens since losing her job at a Finance 
Ministry building on the island of Corfu two years ago.

When she left for the capital city in 2013, she told her two adult sons 
she wouldn’t return to Corfu until she had won her job back. “We 
believed in this from the start. So did all of the ladies here,” she said.

The cleaners’ 20-month-long, 24/7 protest camp—thought to be the longest 
demonstration in Greek history—became a cause célèbre for Greeks who 
feel ordinary workers have borne the brunt of the crisis.

Emotions were high on Monday as cleaners and their sympathizers gathered 
at the protest camp outside a ministry building in Athens, festooned 
with protest banners and a photo of Latin American revolutionary hero 
Che Guevara.

The cleaners, who all worked at offices belonging to the Finance 
Ministry around the country, are among 3,900 laid-off government workers 
that Syriza is rehiring, reversing cuts made by previous Greek 
governments at creditors’ behest.

Officials in the rest of the eurozone see the rehirings as the latest 
example of the Syriza-led government reversing economic reforms and 
acting without lenders’ consent, complicating Athens’ bid for 
desperately needed bailout cash.

Unless Greece secures further aid soon from its €245 billion ($273 
billion) bailout program, the country might default on its debts as 
early as June.

Greece’s next challenge is on Tuesday when the country is due to repay a 
€750 million loan from the IMF.

Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis, speaking ahead of a meeting of 
eurozone finance ministers in Brussels on Monday, expressed his 
solidarity with the cleaning ladies and promised more rollbacks of 
austerity measures.

“We remind (creditors) that our government has a different perception of 
what constitutes a reform,” Mr. Varoufakis said.

The lenders aren’t amused. “Rollbacks in Athens are more concrete than 
readiness to negotiate the completion of the current program,” said a 
senior European official in Brussels.

Syriza officials paraded by the protest camp, with some of them stopping 
to give interviews to the party’s radio station Sto Kokkino (“In the 
Red”), which was broadcasting live from the spot for much of the day.

‘The love of the people was amazing. There were times when teenagers 
would come past and give us their two euros as a way of supporting our 
cause rather than spend it on a coffee for themselves.’
—Anna Chyrsikopoulou, a 45-year-old laid-off cleaner
In the evening the cleaners were due to serve food they had prepared to 
passersby in gratitude for public support during the protest. Since 
Sept. 2013, cleaners have slept in street-side tents through sun, rain, 
storms and even snow.

“The love of the people was amazing,” said Anna Chyrsikopoulou, a 
45-year-old laid-off cleaner, who juggled odd cleaning jobs with protest 
participation.

“There were times when teenagers would come past and give us their two 
euros as a way of supporting our cause rather than spend it on a coffee 
for themselves,” she said.

Syriza officials say the rehirings are within an allowance of 15,000 
public-sector hirings agreed with creditors for this year. Greece’s 
opposition conservatives say the government is squandering opportunities 
to upgrade the civil service.

“The high number of civil servants should be replaced with a better 
level of staff, in areas where there is a real need, like in hospitals 
and other crucial state sectors,” said Costas Karagounis, a lawmaker for 
the conservative New Democracy party, which governed Greece until its 
election defeat to Syriza in January.

But the rehirings, especially those of the cleaners, are a popularity 
boost for Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras. On Monday the government told 
the cleaners they would be hired for an eight-hour working day, longer 
than their previous four-hours-a-day contracts.

“I believe that Mr. Tsipras wants justice. He is a simple person who 
reaches out to the worker,” said Mandalena Trianti, a 52-year-old 
cleaner who voted for Syriza in January’s elections. She says she will 
now return to her previous job: cleaning the offices of a police 
financial-crimes unit.

Not all Greeks support the government’s help for the laid-off public 
workers. With the country’s army of unemployed numbering some 1.2 
million—about a quarter of the workforce—some see Syriza as unfairly 
helping a select few government workers, while those who lost their jobs 
in the private sector face a worsening economy.

“It is the same thing we have seen in the past: The government is taking 
care of some people while ignoring others,” said Theodoris Lambrou, a 
50- year-old restaurant owner. The privately contracted cleaning ladies 
who have been cleaning Finance Ministry buildings will now be out of 
work, he points out. “Who will take care of them?” he said.
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