Monday, June 27, 2011

WORLD FOREX: French Banks' Proposal For Greece Boosts Euro

Greece faces general strike ahead of austerity vote



Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou is seen during a meeting at his office in the Greek Parliament in Athens, Monday, June 27, 2011. (AP / Thanassis Stavrakis)
Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou is seen during a meeting at his office in the Greek Parliament in Athens, Monday, June 27, 2011. (AP / Thanassis Stavrakis)

The Associated Press
Date: Mon. Jun. 27 2011 4:58 PM ET
ATHENS, Greece — Greece's beleaguered government is bracing for a 48-hour general strike as lawmakers debate a new round of austerity reforms designed to win the country additional rescue loans needed avoid bankruptcy.
More than 5,000 police are to guard Athens' city centre Tuesday, with union protest rallies due to start at 10:00 a.m. (0700 GMT) and head to Parliament.
The strike is set to disrupt or halt most public services, with doctors, ambulance drivers, journalists and even actors at a state-funded theatre joining the protest, which is to continue Wednesday.
Flights will be grounded both days during stoppages by air traffic controllers between 8:00 a.m. and midday and between 6:00 p.m. and 10:00 p.m. (0500-0900 GMT and 1500-1900 GMT).
Unions are angry at a new C28 billion ($40 billion) austerity program that would slap taxes on minimum wage earners and other struggling Greeks, following months of other cuts that have seen unemployment surge to more than 16 per cent.
The package and implementation law must be passed in parliamentary votes this week so the European Union and the International Monetary Fund release the next installment of Greece's C110 billion ($156 billion) bailout loan. Without it, Greece faces the prospect next month of becoming the first eurozone country to default on its debts -- a potentially disastrous event that could drag down European banks and affect other financially troubled European countries.
"These measures are a massacre for workers' rights. It will truly be hell for the working man. The strike must bring everything to a standstill," said Thanassis Pafilis, a lawmaker with the Greek Communist Party that will lead one of Tuesday's main rallies.
A three-day debate on the new austerity measures got under way in parliament Monday, with Socialist Prime Minister George Papandreou buoyed by a word that French banks are willing to defer Greek debt claims and ease pressure on Athens.
"I call on you to vote for survival, growth, justice, and a future for the citizens of this country," Papandreou told lawmakers.
Greece remains frozen out of bond markets and is surviving on the C110 billion in promised bailout loans. Rescue creditors have set parliamentary approval of the tough new Greek measures as a strict condition for further assistance to cover a 2012 financing gap.
Papandreou said he hoped the terms of a second bailout would be better than the first, which was agreed last year.
"I call on Europe, for its part, to give Greece the time and the terms it needs to really pay off its debt, without strangling growth, and without strangling its citizens," he said.
Papandreou's new finance minister, Evangelos Venizelos, said the government acknowledged the new cuts were "unfair." He said Greece wants to conclude negotiations for a second bailout by the end of the summer "at the latest," and he urged opposition parties to abandon their opposition to the austerity program.
"These measures will take us from running budget deficits to achieving primary surpluses. It's a difficult but necessary step," Venizelos said.
The Socialists, with traditionally strong ties to the striking unions, have struggled to contain a party revolt against austerity.
Papandreou has a majority of five seats in parliament, but at least one Socialist lawmaker has said he will vote against the government on Wednesday, with another dissenter undecided -- prompting dire warnings from senior government officials.read more.

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