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View Full Version : How the EU / Plutocracy are gutting Greece



RoyBatty
07-29-2010, 11:08 AM
The EU and its bankrupt and corrupt Banking masters have amongst other things ordained that Greece's freight sector must be "liberalised" and "opened to competition".

Translation for "liberalisation" = taken over and destroyed and outsourced to the lowest cost bidder and damn the people who would be most affected by this.

It's another assault against what remains of the Greek economy by the traitorous Greek Government and its co-conspirators, cynically named "austerity measures".




Greek police have fired tear gas to disperse hundreds of lorry drivers protesting in Athens.

The drivers are refusing to obey an emergency government order for them to end a crippling strike.

The strike, now in its fourth day, has paralysed Greece, depriving petrol stations of fuel and prompting tourists to cancel holidays.

Bottles were hurled outside the transport ministry as drivers tried to climb the gates and get inside.

The BBC's Malcolm Brabant in Athens says the drivers are very angry, demanding compensation for reforms that aim to liberalise the freight sector.

The drivers argue that new licence charges are unfair - well below the start-up fees of up to 300,000 euros (£250,000) that existing operators had to pay.

Abandoned lorries
Our correspondent says police are supposed to hand out papers to the drivers telling them that their lorries are being requisitioned. But many drivers have abandoned their lorries so the papers cannot be served.

There are queues outside the few garages that are still open, and shortages of supplies mean some workers are being laid off at factories.

The Greek government has used a rare emergency order to force the lorry drivers back to work. The measure is usually reserved for times of war or natural disaster.

The government wants to open the freight sector to more competition as part of austerity measures agreed with the IMF and the EU.


The back-to-work order was issued hours after negotiations between the government and the drivers broke down.

The country's tourism industry said it was suffering from the strike, with bookings down and many cancellations.



http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-10802239

SwordoftheVistula
08-02-2010, 01:30 AM
It's pretty bad, controlled by a cartel that makes it cost more to ship from other parts of Greece to Athens than from Athens to London. Obviously this is going to seriously retard the development of any other business which would have to rely on trucking, which is nearly everything.