Contact us

Company Name:
Lishui Huanqiu Bearing Trading Co., Ltd.

Company Address:
No.11 Shiting Road, Shuige Industrial Zone,Lishui, Zhejiang,China
Contact Person: William

Email: admin@tradebearings.com
Homepage: www.asiabearings.com
Bearing B2B: www.tradebearings.com

email

 

Home > News >

Greek police ban protests during visit by Germany's Schaeuble

Greek police have banned last Thursday's protest in central Athens during a visit to German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble, a lot of people accused forced the Greek painful cuts in exchange for multi-billion euro bailout to keep afloat.
Now, with Greece in the sixth year of deep recession in the fuel crunch, many struggling with record unemployment and living standards plummeted blamed Germany stick to its economic woes fiscal rigor.
Hundreds of workers took to the streets in more than a week of violent protest against government plans to cut thousands of public sector workers of Greece EU and International Monetary Fund (IMF) lenders.
Prime Minister Samaras (Antonis Samaras) coalition government late Wednesday narrowly passed a vote split bill, including unemployment, in addition to 700 million euros of aid conditionalities.
"Hail to Schaeuble!" Leftist Avgi newspaper last Thursday on its front page screaming. "Dying salute you," the ministers wrote it over the stern-looking photos.
Ban prohibits protesters gathered in the central part of Athens, the police official said, including in the Constitution Square (Syntagma Square), aimed at resolving the debt crisis cuts focus often violent protests against around parliament.
The ban includes a set of three or more people holding banners and shouting slogans will be 9:00 to 20:00 local time. Central subway station will also be closed.
"Who is Mr Schaeuble banned protest austerity Greek citizens do?" From the radical left-wing opposition party, the radical left-wing coalition, want to rip bailout plan, Congressman Panagiotis Lafazanis ask.
"You are running the country as a protected area, a banana republic."
Tens of thousands of demonstrators to protest despite ban during the visit of German Chancellor Angela Merkel, in October of the Greek capital, while some police threw stones, bottles and sticks. The latter-day swastika, festooned with pictures irony Merkel is commonplace.
Schaeuble visit to Athens, the European debt crisis first time since the end of 2009 Greece 10 billion euros to provide a fund to promote economic growth.
About 3,500 policemen will be deployed in the streets of Athens, during his visit, while another 3,000 will be on standby.
 



Other News:
Greek police ban protests during visit by Germany's Schaeuble
Kerry says Israel, Palestinians lay groundwork for peace talks
Bank of America's interest-rate exposure may be worse than rivals'
Mursi's overthrow rattles Egypt's Islamists in their heartland
China bars Glaxo finance chief from leaving
Kurd militants make "final warning" to Turkey on peace process
Eli Lilly to freeze employee base pay ahead of generic onslaught
Shareholders voting on $24.4 billion Dell buyout