Workers across Greece walked off the job on Tuesday, kicking off a crippling 48-hour strike with a mass protest in the capital, Athens, as parliament debated a new austerity plan. Police fired tear gas in clashes with protesters.
Greece ground to a halt Tuesday as angry workers launched a 48-hour general strike against an austerity drive ordered by its bankruptcy-threatened government in exchange for a European bailout.
Crowds converged early on Syntagma Square, where parliament will vote on sweeping spending cuts as planes, ships and most public transport came to a halt.
Europe’s economic tsar Olli Rehn in Brussels warned that Greece faced “a critical juncture” and the austerity programme was the “only way to avoid immediate default.”
But that view was not shared by protestors, determined to block passage of the package.
“We don’t want your money Europe,” Iamando, 36, told AFP on the square where police were already out in force at 11:00 am (0800 GMT). “Leave us alone — please, please, please.”
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