Rioting, fires break out in Athens amid protests against Greek austerity

Rioting broke out in Athens, with fires engulfing multiple buildings, as Greek citizens protested against a government plan to slash wages and eliminate government jobs in exchange for an international bailout.

Protesters clash with police in Athens on Sunday.

Petros Giannakouris/AP

February 12, 2012

Rioting spread across central Athens and at least seven buildings went up in flames amid protests late Sunday as lawmakers debated cutting spending and eliminating government jobs to win an international bailout and remain in the eurozone.

TV footage showed a three-story corner building completely engulfed in flames with riot officers looking on from the street, and firefighters trying to douse the blaze. The burning buildings included a bank, a mobile phone dealership, a glassware store and a cafeteria, the fire department said. Also engulfed in the flames was Athen's Attikon Cinema, an elegant theater dating back to 1914.

It was not immediately clear whether there was anyone inside the burning buildings.

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Related: Breaking down the Greek debt problem

Clashes erupted across the city center after more than 100,000 protesters marched to parliament to rally against drastic austerity cuts that will force firings in the civil service and slash the minimum wage.

Riot police fired dozens of tear gas volleys to clear the streets around parliament of rioting youths, who attacked them with firebombs, fireworks and chunks of marble smashed off the fronts of luxury hotels, banks and department stores.

Authorities said several protesters and police were injured, while an unspecified number of suspected rioters were detained.

Wage cuts

Prime Minister Lucas Papademos' government — an unlikely coalition of the majority Socialists and their main foes, the conservative New Democracy — was expected to carry the vote, even by a narrow margin.

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Combined, they control 236 of Parliament's 300 seats, although at least 20 lawmakers from both main parties said they would not back the new private sector wage cuts, pension reductions and civil service layoffs dictated by the draft austerity program.

"There are very few such moments in the history of a nation," Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos said. "Our country has an acute issue of survival."

"The question is not whether some salaries and pensions will be curtailed, but whether we will be able to pay even these reduced wages and pensions," he added. "When you have to choose between bad and worse, you will pick what is bad to avoid what is worse."

The new cuts, which follow two years of record unemployment and tax hikes have been demanded by the International Monetary Fund, the European Central Bank, and other international groups in return for a new batch of rescue loans.

Related: Breaking down the Greek debt problem