Thousands of Greeks gather in front of the Greek parliament in Athens on June 15, 2016. (Photo by AFP)
Thousands of dissatisfied
Greeks have staged a protest rally in Athens and another major city to
ask the government to resign over continued austerity.
At
least 10,000 Greeks gathered outside the parliament in Athens on
Wednesday, demanding the resignation of the leftist government of Prime
Minister Alexis Tsipras.
The protesters were supporters of the
“Resign” movement, which perceives Tsipras's policies a failure, driving
the country into more poverty.
They addressed the premier in their slogans, chanting “Resign!” and “People don’t want you, take your junta and leave!”
A
similar demonstration was held at Thessaloniki, the second largest city
in the country and the capital of Greek Macedonia in northern Greece. A
protester holds a picture depicting Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras
behind bars of a prison cell during a demonstration in Athens on June
15, 2016. (Photo by AFP)The Resign movement was organized through Facebook and other social media a few weeks ago.
It is a bid to allow protesters to vent their anger and discontent against strict austerity measures adopted by the ruling Syriza political party and to force the government to quit.
The
movement’s representative Eleni Kritsidima had earlier said that the
rally would be a peaceful one and the protests Wednesday went by
peacefully.
The protest, however, has sparked fierce reactions
from the leftist government which says the movement is instigated by
opposition parties, New Democracy and PASOK.
“The ‘Resign’
movement is a cause that does not address the needs of Greek society and
which is hostile towards the country at this time,” said government
spokeswoman Olga Gerovasili on state TV on Tuesday.
“The organizers are trying to hide by saying that no [politicians] are involved and this is all a spontaneous thing,” she said. People hold a banner reading “Go home Tsipras” in front of the Greek parliament in Athens on June 15, 2016. (Photo by AFP)For
years, Greece has been rocked by riots and industrial action in protest
at the government's austerity policies which are dictated by the
European Commission, the European Central Bank, and the International
Monetary Fund. Austerity
measures are intended to reduce government debt and bring stability to
the nation's economy but they have failed to improve Greece's financial
situation. The austerity
program has instead compounded Greece's problems because spending
cuts have worsened the crisis of lower aggregate demand.
Last
July, Greece signed a deal with the three big lenders to receive an EUR
86-billion bailout in exchange for fresh austerity reforms.
The agreement, however, triggered outrage and numerous protests against Tsipras who came to power on an anti-austerity platform.
Greece
has already received two bailouts in 2010 and 2012, worth a total of
EUR 240 billion from its creditors following the economic crisis which
began in 2009.
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