Athens (AFP) – More than 15,000 people took to the streets in Greece on Wednesday in the second 24-hour general strike this year, calling for higher wages to match the rising cost of living. Transport ground to a halt as air traffic controllers joined the action, while rail and public transport, as well as island ferry services, were hit. Schools, courts, banks, and public offices were also shut as part of the demonstrations.
The action came as the new sweeping tariffs imposed by US President Donald Trump came into effect. They include a 20-percent levy on the European Union, of which Greece is a member. In Athens, police said more than 10,000 people gathered near parliament as part of public- and private-sector union action against the conservative government of Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis. Protesters shouted “salary increases,” “injustice is suffocating us,” and “down with New Democracy” — Mitsotakis’s party.
Public sector union ADEDY blamed the “exorbitant prices” on “the cartels that operate freely in the energy sector but also in various products and services.” Increasing housing costs were the result of “anarchic tourist development,” it added, pointing the finger at the government.
In Greece’s second-largest city, Thessaloniki, some 5,000 people turned out to protest. “We can’t live decently with these salaries that we receive,” shopworker Eleni Iaonnidou, 27, told AFP. “When we spend nearly 50 percent of our salary on rent, how can we live?” “My pension is not even enough for 20 days a month,” said Kostas Papaioannou, 69. “We’re asking for something very simple: to be able to meet the basic needs of our life.”
ADEDY said there had been “10 years of stagnation” and that salaries had only increased by four percent this year and one percent last year. Private sector union GSEE wants the reinstatement of collective agreements cancelled during the financial difficulties of the last decade and “real increases to counter the high cost of living.”
Although Greece saw high economic growth of 2.2 percent last year, salaries remain low despite rising taxes and inflation that hit 3.5 percent in the middle of last year. Faced with mounting public anger, the government pushed up the minimum wage from 830 euros to 880 euros ($972) a month on April 1, a 6.4-percent jump. In February, huge protests marking the second anniversary of Greece’s worst rail tragedy turned violent, as masked youths threw petrol bombs and rocks at police, who responded with tear gas and stun grenades.
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