Sydsvenskan rapporterar om protester vid antika Akropolis i Aten:
"Vi har valt detta monument över demokratin, detta globala monument, för att proklamera att vi motsätter oss statens våld och kräver vår rätt till utbildning och arbete, sade en av demonstranterna. Han tillade att syftet var att ”sända ut ett budskap över hela världen och till hela Europa”.Svenska Dagbladet rapporterar att protesterna återigen blossat upp under gårdagen:
Protesterna i Grekland har utlöst sympatiaktioner från Moskva till Madrid och väckt oro bland europeiska beslutsfattare för spridning även på andra håll i takt med att den ekonomiska tillbakagången börjar bita och arbetslösheten stiga."
"De senaste dagarna har det rått ett relativt lugn i Grekland och i går var protesterna fredliga när demonstranter vecklade ut två stora banderoller vid Akropolis. I dag kommer dock rapporter om nya våldsamheter.BBC-news rapporterar om gårdagen:
Enligt nyhetsbyrån AP ska stenkastande ungdomar och polis ha drabbat samman under torsdagen, med följden att julshoppare och barnfamiljer tvingades fly i all hast."
"An estimated 10,000 people joined a demonstration in Athens on Thursday that congregated outside a university and marched towards parliament, in anger at the shooting of a 15-year-old boy by a policeman on 6 December.Al Jazeera rapporterar om flera händelser:
Banners castigated the government, which protesters accuse of failing the Greek people.
"Down with the government of blood, poverty and privatisations," one banner read"
"Rallies by unions, students and teachers also took place in the northern city of Thessaloniki and on the island of Crete.Tidigare inlägg: Vad händer i Grekland?
The protests have caused hundreds of millions of dollars of damage [AFP]
Stathis Anestis, a spokesman for the GSEE private sector union federation which took part in the rallies, said: "We are not finished just because it's Christmas. We will continue and intensify our struggle in the next year."
A three-hour work stoppage by public workers halted all but emergency flights between 1000 and 1300 GMT on Thursday.
Transport services were frozen, while doctors and teachers walked off the job, reviving memories of last week's 24-hour national strike.
Adding to tensions in the capital, before further protests planned later on Thursday and Friday, police said a 16-year-old had been shot in the hand by an unidentified gunman in Athens late on Wednesday.
"Not only policeman carry guns," said Panagiotis Stathis, a police spokesman, strongly denying any officers were involved.
"There were no policemen there because there was no reason. We are now conducting an investigation to see who was responsible," he said"
Bloggat: Svensson
Andra bloggar om: Grekland, protester, demonstrationer, kravaller, stenkastning, demokrati, politik, uppror, polis, polisvåld
Pingat på intressant

Inga kommentarer:
Skicka en kommentar