Saturday, July 2, 2011

Greek tension ahead of fresh vote

Man walking through smoke

Clashes in Athens continue overnight with tear gas and smoke from fires filling the city centre

Greece's parliament is to hold a second vote on its austerity programme, which it needs to implement to secure the country further financial support.

The vote is about putting into practice the tax hikes, pay cuts, privatisations and public sector redundancies approved in principle on Wednesday.

The vote was a retreat from the "grave scenario of default", the EU said.

Public reaction has been very hostile, and the debate has been accompanied by strikes and violent protest.

Clashes continued on Syntagma Square outside parliament overnight, as police fired tear gas at stone-throwing youths.

Protesters set fire to a post office in the finance ministry building, on another part of the square.

Thursday's voteDebate starts at 0930 local time (0630 GMT)Vote itself not before 1400Roll-call vote with verbal response by MPsPossible additional votes on individual articlesGovernment has a majority of eight over all other parties

MPs are not expected to vote before 1400 local time (1100 GMT), and it is not clear how many votes will need to be held to push the measures through.

Government officials say they are confident that those who supported them in Wednesday's vote, when the package was approved in principle by 155 votes to 138, would also vote for implementation, known as enabling legislation.

Its measures include:

The setting up of a privatisation agencyPreparation for privatisation of state-owned real estateTax increasesCurbs on public sector recruitmentSocial security regulations

The opposition New Democracy party, which voted against the government on Wednesday, has said that it will support some elements of the bill involving privatisation and spending cuts.

Greek tragedy

Total Greek debt

An old drachma note and a euro note Greece is about to get a second bail-out from the EU, aimed at helping pay its debts until 2014. It also has to agree more cuts as part of the deal.

The economy

The opening ceremony at the Athens Olympics The Greek economy is in dire straits. Retail sales have fallen 18% since 2008 and manufacturing output has dropped 30% in the same period.

Working population

A defunct restaurant for sale in central Athens Greeks retire on average at 61. Tax evasion is widespread. Until 2010, public sector workers received two months extra pay a year in bonuses.

EU demands

A man with a bag of coins walks past the headquarters of the Bank of greece_crisis To meet EU demands, Greece must sell 50bn euros-worth of public assets by 2014, equal to 20% of GDP. Public sector pay is being cut 15%.
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The vote will enable Greece to receive the latest tranche of a 110bn-euro (£98bn) loan in time instead of defaulting.

But analysts say the real challenge will come after the loan is secured, and there is concern about whether the austerity measures can be effectively implemented in the face of so much public hostility.

Wednesday's vote prompted a furious response from protesters in Athens.

Sporadic violent clashes were continuing in the capital in the early hours of Thursday between masked protesters - armed with stones and sticks - and riot police firing tear gas and stun grenades.

Despite the unrest, European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso and European Council President Herman Van Rompuy welcomed the result as a "vote of national responsibility" paving the way for a second aid package.

Crucial datesJune 29: Parliament approves new austerity packageJune 30: MPs to vote on details of implementing packageJuly 3: EU will sign off latest bail-out payment to Greece - 12bn euros - if both votes are passedJuly 15: Without the 12bn euros, Greece will defaultCan the eurozone carry on? Viewpoint: Need for consensus Greece strikes: Your views

The package of tax rises and budget cuts - worth about 28bn euros over five years - had been championed by Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou.

Had it been rejected, Greece could have run out of money within weeks. The EU and the International Monetary Fund have demanded that the measures are implemented before they extend further loans to Greece.

Greek unions are angry that the government's austerity programme will impose taxes on those earning the minimum wage, following months of other cuts that have seen unemployment rise to more than 16%.

Once passed, European officials will start to finalise the details of a second bail-out, worth an estimated 120bn euros, designed to help Greece pay its debts until the end of 2014.

Countries most exposed to Greek debt

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Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/world-europe-13970916

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