MORE than 100,000 people have taken to the streets of Lisbon and
other Portuguese cities to protest against fresh austerity measures
recently announced by the centre-right government.
Organisers estimated that 50,000 people turned out for the Lisbon
protest, with a similar number in the second-largest city of Porto and
several thousands in around 30 other cities. The country's police
generally do not release numbers.In the capital, protesters clashed with police in front of the parliament, but no one was injured.
University students and artists called for the rallies on Facebook, and were backed by far-left parties and Portugal's biggest union CGTP, which has also called for a large demonstration at the end of the month.
With banners reading "Stop social terrorism" and "Soon the State will steal from the dead", the protesters were up in arms over the latest austerity measures announced a week ago by the government, as it struggles to meet its economic targets.
"This government will kill Portugal, and if we don't do anything,
it will be worse," said Ivan Rodriguez, a protester in his thirties in
Lisbon, where others banged on drums and clapped their hands to make as
much noise as possible.
"I'm fighting to preserve my job and those of others," he added.
Another slogan, "Let the troika go to the devil", made reference to the country's international creditors - the so-called troika of the European Union (EU), the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the European Central Bank.
The global economic institutions are monitoring Portugal's implementation of spending cuts and reforms required in return for the 78 billion euro ($A96.67 billion) rescue package the country received in 2011.
These cuts and reforms caused the economy to contract by 1.2 per cent in the second quarter, faster than the 0.1 per cent rate at the beginning of the year, with the drop for the whole year expected to hit 3.0 per cent.
In response, Portuguese Prime Minister Pedro Passos Coelho announced a rise in social security contributions for public and private sector workers together with cuts in employers' contributions in a bid to kickstart job creation, with unemployment running at more than 15 per cent.
But since the announcement, Passos Coelho has met with a barrage of criticism from the opposition and even from several of his political allies.
On Tuesday, Portugal won a reprieve from its creditors, when the EU and IMF agreed to relax Portugal's deficit targets for 2012 and 2013, rewarding the Portuguese for pushing through reforms.
aap 16 Sep 2012
Another country on the hit list of the global banking elite.
'Destroying' economies or rather putting the masses further down the food chain.
"I'm fighting to preserve my job and those of others," he added.
Another slogan, "Let the troika go to the devil", made reference to the country's international creditors - the so-called troika of the European Union (EU), the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the European Central Bank.
The global economic institutions are monitoring Portugal's implementation of spending cuts and reforms required in return for the 78 billion euro ($A96.67 billion) rescue package the country received in 2011.
These cuts and reforms caused the economy to contract by 1.2 per cent in the second quarter, faster than the 0.1 per cent rate at the beginning of the year, with the drop for the whole year expected to hit 3.0 per cent.
In response, Portuguese Prime Minister Pedro Passos Coelho announced a rise in social security contributions for public and private sector workers together with cuts in employers' contributions in a bid to kickstart job creation, with unemployment running at more than 15 per cent.
But since the announcement, Passos Coelho has met with a barrage of criticism from the opposition and even from several of his political allies.
On Tuesday, Portugal won a reprieve from its creditors, when the EU and IMF agreed to relax Portugal's deficit targets for 2012 and 2013, rewarding the Portuguese for pushing through reforms.
aap 16 Sep 2012
Another country on the hit list of the global banking elite.
'Destroying' economies or rather putting the masses further down the food chain.
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