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Eyewitness reports police violence against Athens protesters

The following account was submitted by a Greek student to the WSWS | 16.12.2008 22:50 | World

On Friday, December 12, a protest of 10,000 people filled the centre of Athens. People from every social background took part—students and high school students alongside their professors and their parents, but also many immigrants, unemployed citizens and even public service workers. They all took to the streets to express their opposition to the government.





Starting from the University of Athens, the protest proceeded from Stadiou Street to Syntagma Square and finished up in front of the parliament building where some minor clashes took place with the police. High school students staged a sit-down protest in front of the riot control police (MAT). When the bulk of the protesters arrived, the crowd made two attempts to enter the parliament building.

After a while the police provoked the crowd by picking out and arresting certain individuals. The crowd of demonstrators held their ground. Having had no success, the police sprayed the crowd with tear gas and, wearing gas masks, attacked the protesters. Fortunately, those caught by the police were able to escape with the help of other students and some older men who yelled at the police officers (who were also quite young) that they "should be ashamed of themselves."

As the police intensified their attacks, the demonstrators withdrew to the grounds of the university. En route to the Polytechnio (National Technical University), one of the two universities whose students had organized the protest, police continued to provoke the protesters and grabbed people out of the crowd.

The Polytechnio is located in the Exarchia neighborhood, where the young student Alexis Grigoropoulos was killed over a week ago. It was the first university to be occupied by students on the very night of the murder.

Following the demonstration Friday, between 500 and 700 people gathered in the Polytechnio auditorium—students, unemployed, immigrants and public service workers—to discuss how to proceed. Those gathered stressed the necessity of maintaining the unity of the movement and not allowing it to be subordinated to parties that only sought to exploit the rallies and protests for their own electoral purposes.

The meeting then discussed how to support the high school students who are at the forefront of the demonstrations. Measures were discussed that would improve the exchange of information, ensure that the students remained organized and united and prevent them from getting arrested.

Public sector workers in attendance declared that certain municipalities have entirely closed down and that the workers involved were actively supporting the demonstrations. The meeting also discussed the dangers arising from a deliberate campaign by the media to isolate and break the opposition movement. This would no doubt be supported by and play into the hands of the government.

The students are calling on the workers' movement for support and demanding that those in its leadership who have close contact with and actually work for the government be sacked.

The demands raised included: punishment for those responsible for the death of Alexis Grigoropoulos, the resignation of the government, abolition of the "terror laws" and the police special forces, a ban on carrying weapons by the police, and the release of the 200 students arrested since the outbreak of the demonstrations.

The students have also advanced social demands, among them a call for the abolition of all private educational institutions, colleges and universities and free and unrestricted access to higher education. They are also insisting on the maintenance of the right to asylum in university buildings and property, first established in the course of the mass movement against the Greek military junta in 1973. The protests have also raised the need for decent, secure jobs and a reduced workweek.

On Saturday, December 13, a protest took place in the afternoon in front of the parliament building. Students from the high school attended by Grigoropoulos paid their respects to the slain youth.

Later on some university students protested in front of the assembled police lines, taking off their shirts and kneeling with their hands behind their backs as if they were prisoners.

Although the rally was peaceful, the government had brought in soldiers to protect the parliament and special officers armed with tear gas bottles ready to spray protesters. Despite the tense atmosphere, one student told the police, "We are not fighting you, we know you are humans just like us, we are fighting against your uniform and the laws which you obey."

Later the protest proceeded to Athens' Gazi neighborhood, and then Peireos Street, where police special forces were lying in wait. Two squads suddenly appeared behind the protesters and others came in from the side to close down the protest and arrest as many as they could.

On their route to Omonia Square, a small number of protesters attacked some banks and sought to dismantle closed circuit television systems used by the police to supervise the demonstrations. Contrary to media reports of widespread destruction, however, these were the two main targets of the protesters.

Those taking part in the daily protests are outraged at the stance taken by the Greek media, which concentrates entirely on scuffles between police and protesters in such a way as to depict an extremist image of the people protesting. The reports on the protests mention student protesters, but make no mention of the professors, teaching staff and parents taking part. Instead the newspapers concentrate on the damage to shops and the reimbursements that the government has promised to business owners.

The following account was submitted by a Greek student to the WSWS
- Homepage: http://www.wsws.org

Comments

Hide the following 5 comments

more jobs?!

17.12.2008 01:01

how do students expect free education, more jobs, less hours and more pay to materialise when there is so much damage to the the Greek economy? Sorry to be blunt but surely they'd be expecting less jobs and pay?

Michael


michael dude

17.12.2008 01:37

no matter how much they pay you, your job is miserable and so are you

greek


Jobs

17.12.2008 10:41

Improvements in pay and conditions have only ever been won by sabotage against the economy. The Tory argument that by making the economy bigger we can all get better conditions is false. The conditions we live under depend upon our political freedom and our access to produce. Making the rich richer doesn't increase our access to produce, it reduces our relative buying power. Our political freedoms were won through struggle and our rate of exploitation has been brought down by struggle. We sabotage the system every time we speak out, withdraw our labour or break a machine.

Capital


Jobs

19.12.2008 02:20

Greek, No matter how little they pay you on state benefits, your unemployment is miserable and so are you.
That is partially true, capital. But if the greeks continue then foreign investors will begin to pull out. That will leave less factories, shops and businesses for people to work in. I don't think the greek youth is smart or civil enough to start their own businesses, or even want to work as the above poster shows.

michael


Open Mic

20.12.2008 11:28

Perhaps Michael is right. No one afterall here is claiming that people in Greece are any smarter than people elsewhere. But you clearly demonstrate that they are a hell of a lot smarter than yourself. How can you even begin to judge a movement when you have no clue what its aims are. You speak of foreign invesrment economic growth and the usual bollocks fed to the population by an elite interest group who try to pillage the resources of whatever land they set foot on (including wherever the fuck you live) Protesters in Greece do not want job creation if it is to be under the terms and conditions of the capitalist. Were sick of waged slavery and enforced dependance on Capitalism. Greece (thankfully) can never maintain its capitalist structure an provide its citizens with the material capacity in the way the UK or US- or whichever western country you're writing- from can. That's due to the simple fact that Greece, unlike the 'developed' never had an empire and therefore has no easy access to rape the third world of it's resources resulting in a massive GNP and therefore 'improved conditions' for the domestic working class. Even then Capitalist greed still takes its self destructive path hence we are left with the shit created in your parts of the world (crisis et. al). To conclude this pointless discussion. We do want change, but we want it our way. You choose to allow others to dictate the path to be taken. We'd like to operate under different principles. Are we thick? Perhaps. But then again your reasoning doesn't really demonstrate a mental superiority. Just recycled bollocks.

Athens Scum