Saturday May 25, 2013 Search
Weather | Athens
27o C
17o C
News
Business
Comment
Life
Sports
Community
Survival Guide
Greek Edition
Merkel tells Greeks painful reforms will pay off

 German Chancellor says wants to keep Greece in eurozone

By Andreas Rinke & Lefteris Papadimas

Tens of thousands of angry Greek protesters filled the streets of Athens on Tuesday to greet German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who offered sympathy but no promise of further aid on her first visit since the euro crisis erupted three years ago.

As police fired tear gas and stun grenades to halt angry crowds chanting anti-austerity slogans and waving swastika flags, Merkel’s host, Prime Minister Antonis Samaras, welcomed her as a ”friend”.

Blamed by many Greeks for imposing draconian budget cuts in exchange for aid, Merkel reaffirmed Berlin’s commitment to keep the debt-crippled Greek state inside Europe’s single currency.

”I have come here today in full knowledge that the period Greece is living through right now is an extremely difficult one for the Greeks and many people are suffering,” Merkel said during a joint news conference with Samaras just a few hundred yards from the mayhem on Syntagma Square, outside parliament.

”Precisely for that reason I want to say that much of the path is already behind us,” she added, offering a public display of support to Samaras’s three-month-old government on her first visit to Greece since 2007.

She tried to reassure her hosts that their reforms would eventually pay off, but also made clear that Greece, which has seen its unemployment rate surge to nearly 25 percent and economic output shrink by a fifth, would not solve its problems overnight.

Samaras promised to implement economic reforms necessary to restore confidence: ”The Greek people are bleeding but are determined to stay in the euro,” he said.

On the other side of the parliament building, tens of thousands of demonstrators defied a ban and gathered to voice their displeasure with the German leader, whom many blame for forcing painful cuts on Greece in exchange for two EU-IMF bailout packages worth over 200 billion euros ($260 billion).

Greek police fired teargas and stun grenades when protesters tried to break through a barrier to reach the cordoned-off area where Merkel and Samaras were meeting. Some demonstrators pelted police with rocks, bottles and sticks.

Four people dressed in World War Two-era German military uniforms and riding on a small jeep, waved black-white-and-red swastika flags and stuck their hands out in the Hitler salute.

Banners read ”Merkel out, Greece is not your colony” and ”This is not a European Union, it’s slavery”.

Some 6,000 police officers were deployed, including anti-terrorist units and rooftop snipers, to provide security during the six-hour visit. German sites in the Greek capital, including the embassy and Goethe Institute, were under special protection.

After steering clear of Greece for the past five years, Merkel decided to visit now for several reasons.

She was keen to show support for Samaras, a fellow conservative, as he struggles to impose more cuts on a society fraying at the edges after five years of recession.

With a year to go until Germany holds a parliamentary election, Merkel also hoped to neutralise opposition criticism at home that she has neglected Greece and contributed to its woes by insisting on crushing budget cuts.

After her government flirted earlier this year with the idea of allowing Greece to exit the euro zone, she now appears determined to keep it in - at least until the German election is out of the way.

Greece is in talks with its ”troika” of lenders - the European Union, European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund - on the next tranche of a 130-billion-euro ($170-billion) loan package, its second bailout since 2010.

Without the 31.5-billion-euro tranche, Greece says it will run out of money by the end of November.

Merkel said the aid payment was ”urgently needed” but stopped short of promising that the funds would flow.

”The troika report will come when it is ready. Being thorough is more important than being quick,” Merkel said.

”We are working hard on this, but we must resolve all the problems,” she added. ”I think we’ll see light at the end of the tunnel.” Ties between Germany and Greece run deep. Thousands of Greeks came to Germany after World War Two as ”guest workers” to help rebuild the shattered country and more than 300,000 Greeks currently reside there.

But the relationship is clouded by atrocities Greeks suffered at the hands of the Nazis. Samaras’s own great grandmother killed herself after she watched Nazi tanks rolling down the streets of Athens and the swastika flying over the Acropolis.

Greek President Karolos Papoulias, whom Merkel also met on Tuesday, fought against the Germans as a teenager, before fleeing to escape persecution by the Greek military dictatorship and finding refuge in Germany.

The crisis has revived long-dormant animosities, with Greek protesters burning effigies of Merkel in Nazi gear and German media playing up images of lazy Greeks keen for German cash.

Relations hit a post-war low early this year when Merkel’s finance minister, Wolfgang Schaeuble, likened Athens to a ”bottomless pit” and proposed imposing a European ”Sparkommissar” on Greece to control its finances.

”The average German voter is irritated at the thought of dispatching more taxes or savings to feckless southerners, yet is desperate for the respect and goodwill to Germany that comes from public displays of magnanimity,” said David Marsh, chairman of think tank OMFIF.

”When Merkel flies to Athens, she’s showing she’s in charge, and she cares.” [Reuters]

ekathimerini.com , Tuesday October 9, 2012 (18:56)  
IMF chief Lagarde to be ´assisting witness´ in corruption trial
Diamantopoulou is latest ex-PASOK minister to break from party, eye new group
Ex-minister says trial part of parties’ ‘plot’
Half of young Greeks will not vote for MEPs
ENERGY
Industries protest over delays in drop of energy costs
Energy-intensive industries on Friday protested a delay in measures announced a couple of months ago for reducing energy costs and for ironing out the electricity market distortions that sig...
FINANCE
TaxisNet opens late and not without problems
TaxisNet, the electronic portal for submitting tax declarations, opened on Friday afternoon after a delay of four days, in a year when almost all taxpayers will need to use the web to file t...
Inside Business
SOCCER
PAOK bounces back to win at Asteras
PAOK recovered some of the ground lost in the Super League playoffs by beating fellow Champions League-spot contender Asteras 2-1 at Tripoli on Wednesday, while PAS Giannina and Atromitos sh...
BASKETBALL
Playoffs begin in basketball with Rethymno upsetting PAOK
The league that in the last three years has produced the European basketball champion entered its playoffs on Tuesday and Wednesday with the first games of the quarterfinal round, with AGO R...
Inside Sports
COMMENTARY
Citizens´ self-defense
The dramatic appeal for a national mobilization in the face of a heightened threat of devastating forest fires this summer, which Public Order Minister Nikos Dendias voiced in Parliament on ...
EDITORIAL
Fire protection is everyone´s duty
The danger of wildfires breaking out across the country in the summer period is just as high this year just as it has been every other year before. But, the tools and infrastructure availabl...
Inside Comment
SPONSORED LINK: FinanzNachrichten.de
 RECENT NEWS
1. IMF chief Lagarde to be ´assisting witness´ in corruption trial
2. Industries protest over delays in drop of energy costs
3. TaxisNet opens late and not without problems
4. Tourism arrivals confirm record expectations
5. NBG posts remarkably high profits
6. Diamantopoulou is latest ex-PASOK minister to break from party, eye new group
more news
Today
This Week
1. Pangrati shootout leads to officer taking bullet in vest
2. Court rejects Tsochatzopoulos appeal for ex-PM to testify
3. Data on courtesy cars for politicians submitted to Parl't
4. Papaconstantinou has 'huge responsibility,' publisher tells Lagarde list inquiry
5. SYRIZA looks to overhaul of 'oligopolistic' media
6. Submission of online tax declarations begins
Today
This Week
1. Golden Dawn MP ejected from Parl't after 'Heil Hitler' incident [UPDATE]
2. Slovenian philospher Zizek proposes 'gulag' for those who do not support SYRIZA
3. Eurozone decisions on direct bank recap and debt relief for Greece imminent, says Dijsellbloem
4. Greece isn't turning the corner
5. On a dangerous path
6. Poll shows SYRIZA edge ahead, low faith in all parties
   Find us ...
  ... on
Twitter
     ... on Facebook   
About us  |  Subscriptions  |  Advertising  |  Contact us  |  Athens Plus  |  International Herald Tribune  |  RSS
Copyright © 2013, H KAΘHMEPINH All Rights Reserved.