Strikes over public pay hit Greece
A wave of strikes saw thousands of public sector workers take to the streets yesterday as Greece's beleaguered government faced demands for pay increases.
Doctors, teachers, professors, judges and police officers stayed away from work while travellers at Athens' international airport were handed leaflets by coastguards, police officers and firefighters demanding "hazard pay".
Taxi drivers also begin a 48-hour strike tomorrow to protest against government demands that they distribute printed receipts ahead of the 2004 Athens Olympics.
Greece's powerful trade unions normally have good relations with the ruling Socialists, but ties have soured amid widespread calls for pay increases.
With general elections due next spring, and the governing Pasok party trailing in the polls, the prime minister, Costas Simitis, unexpectedly announced increases for low-income groups, including clergymen, last month.
But he ruled out raises for "privileged" professionals, saying "there is simply no more to give" as a result of hosting the Olympics. The games are expected to expand the Greek economy by 4.2% over the next year.
But Greeks, among the lowest income earners in the EU, say their purchasing power has dropped by around 25% since the introduction of the euro last year.
Taxi drivers also begin a 48-hour strike tomorrow to protest against government demands that they distribute printed receipts ahead of the 2004 Athens Olympics.
Greece's powerful trade unions normally have good relations with the ruling Socialists, but ties have soured amid widespread calls for pay increases.
With general elections due next spring, and the governing Pasok party trailing in the polls, the prime minister, Costas Simitis, unexpectedly announced increases for low-income groups, including clergymen, last month.
But he ruled out raises for "privileged" professionals, saying "there is simply no more to give" as a result of hosting the Olympics. The games are expected to expand the Greek economy by 4.2% over the next year.
But Greeks, among the lowest income earners in the EU, say their purchasing power has dropped by around 25% since the introduction of the euro last year.

Use the feedback form below to submit your comments.

Use the form below to email this article to your friends.

- Two Die As Quake Shakes Greece
- Harsh Treatment Awaits Children Fleeing War and Persecution
- DNA Explodes Greek Myth About Women
- In Praise of ... Lesbians
- Macedonia Walks Out of Nato Talks
- Rubbish Poses Health Threat As Greeks Strike Over Pensions
- Father Who Killed Son, Six, May Return to Uk Soon
- 50 Migrants Feared Dead As Boat Capsizes
- Government Accused As Fires in Greece Rage for Fifth Day
- Fires Sweep Greece Turning Villages to Ash and Killing 46
- Greece Bans Pin-up Billboards to Stop Distracted Drivers Crashing
- Rocket Attack on Us Embassy in Greece
- Family Holiday Ends in Tragedy As Two British Children Found Dead in Corfu
- Icon Found After Five-week Hunt
- Frustration As Summit Fails to End Conflict
- Greece Urged to Investigate Mi6 Torture Link
- Greece Becomes First Eu Country to Confirm Bird Flu
- Ancient Greek Music
- Sailing Acts: Backing Acts in Greece
- U.S. Embassy Attacked in Greece
- Greece to Restore Theater of Dionysus, The Ancient 'Globe' of Euripides and Sophocles
- Sparta vs. Athens
- Democracy in Ancient Greece
- Ancient Greek Coins
- Ancient Greece Geography
- Unrest and Rioting in Greece Reaches a Crescendo



