Rioters Rampage for Third Day in Major Greek Cities

Alan

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ATHENS, Greece — Gangs of youths smashed their way through central Athens, Thessaloniki and other Greek cities into the early hours Tuesday, torching stores, buildings and cars in a third day of mayhem after the fatal police shooting of a teenager.

In the country's worst rioting in decades, dozens of shops, banks and luxury hotels had their windows smashed as youths fought running battles with riot police. Black smoke rose above the city center, mingling with clouds of tear gas. Broken glass littered the streets.

Hundreds of high school and university students joined self-styled anarchists in throwing everything from fruit and coins to rocks and Molotov cocktails at police and attacked police stations throughout the day. Police said some rioters were armed with crossbows, knives and swords.

"Cops! Pigs! Murderers!" protesters screamed at riot police.

Click to view photos.

Police said early Tuesday that 89 people had been arrested in Athens for attacking police officers, vandalism and looting and 79 more were being questioned about possible involvement in the rioting. The fire service said it responded to more than 200 blazes in central Athens on Monday, about half of them in buildings and the rest in cars and trash bins used as barricades.

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Prime Minister Costas Karamanlis, who has already faced a growing number of sometimes violent demonstrations, held an emergency Cabinet meeting Monday night.

"All the dangerous and unacceptable events that occurred because of the emotions that followed the tragic incident cannot and will not be tolerated," Karamanlis said in a live televised address Monday. "The state will protect society."

But his calls for calm went unheeded. The widely televised scenes of destruction were a new blow to an increasingly unpopular conservative government that has been rocked by financial scandals and retains a razor-thin majority of just one seat in the 300-member Parliament.

"In the streets today, a whole generation mourns," George Papandreou, leader of the opposition socialists, said in calling for a peaceful demonstration in Athens on Tuesday to protest "against state violence, against violence towards our fellow people."

Amid the riots, about 10,000 protesters from the Communist Party of Greece and another left-wing party marched through the center of Athens to protest the teenager's death.

Rioting raged in about a dozen cities, from Thessaloniki in the north to cities in Crete and the holiday island of Corfu. In Athens, rioters burned the capital's huge Christmas tree in central Syntagma Square. As the hooded youths moved on, some protesters posed for photos in front of the blaze, and others sang the Greek version of "Oh Christmas Tree."

The windows of two of Athens' luxury hotels, the Athens Plaza and the Grande Bretagne on Syntagma Square, were smashed. A hotel guard at the Athens Plaza said its guests had been evacuated.

A lone man with a bucket of water struggled to extinguish a fire in the ground floor of the Foreign Ministry, opposite Parliament.

The four-story Olympic Airways office building in central Athens was completely burned as were a Greek bank and dozens of other stores on Athens' central streets.

Rioters set up burning barricades across downtown streets.

Scenes of destruction also unfolded in Thessaloniki, where hundreds of masked and hooded youths hurled rocks and molotov cocktails at storefronts and riot police, who responded with tear gas.

The fire departments of both cities rushed to respond to dozens of fires. In Athens, rioters surrounded a small fire truck as it tried to extinguish a blaze, smashing the truck's windows before setting it alight.

Elsewhere, rioters looted a store selling hunting weapons and swords.

Interior Minister Prokopis Pavlopoulos described the riots as "unacceptable" but insisted police were responding as well as they could to the widespread destruction to property.

"Not a single life is in danger. ... That is very important," Pavlopoulos said after the two-hour emergency Cabinet meeting. "Human life is top priority. Property comes next."

"Under no circumstances will the government tolerate what is happening," he said.

Riots first erupted across the country Saturday after 15-year-old Alexandros Grigoropoulos was fatally shot by a police officer in Athens' often volatile Exarchia district.

The circumstances surrounding the shooting were unclear, but the two officers involved were arrested. One was charged with murder and the other as an accomplice. A coroner's report said the youth was shot in the chest.

The funeral was set for Tuesday afternoon. Schools were to shut Tuesday in mourning, while staff at universities declared a three-day strike.

The Police Officers' Association has apologized to the boy's family, and President Karolos Papoulias sent a telegram to his parents expressing his condolences.

Abroad, demonstrators raised banners at the Greek Embassy in London and the black-and-red anarchist flag at the Greek consulate in Berlin.

With the global financial crisis hitting Greek consumers, shop owners worried the violence would hurt consumer confidence.

"It comes at a time when we have been trying so hard to establish a Christmas spirit in the market," said Vassilis Krokidis, head of the Piraeus Traders' Association. "Our challenge remains getting through the economic crisis and saving the jobs of those who work in regular businesses."

One assistant at a china shop that was attacked and ruined said rioters didn't think about ordinary people like her.

"Nobody seems to care about the employees at the burnt shops, what will their fate be now over the Christmas season?" said the woman, who gave her name only as Eleni.

Although there is little public support for street violence or wanton destruction of property, there is a deep well of tolerance for demonstrations in Greece, where the right to protest is held dear.

Violence often breaks out between riot police and anarchists during demonstrations. Anarchist groups are also blamed for late-night firebombings of targets such as banks and diplomatic vehicles. The attacks rarely cause injuries.

The self-styled anarchist movement partly traces its roots in the resistance to Greece's 1967-74 military dictatorship. The youths tend to espouse general anti-capitalist and antiestablishment principles, and have long-running animosity toward the police.

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,463406,00.html


Bunch of morons. Amazing how the police allow them to go on the rampage :rolleyes:
 

Hoof-Hearted

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silly greek cops should know that they'll need to come from behind to quell the riots :)
 

Slaine73

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Here we have a pet name for rioting, it is called toi-toi. Then the police get sick of it all, fire a few rubber bullets, sharp point ammunition, although in the police report they always deny this. Then we go on untill the next time. Simple:D:p
 

brixton tower

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Is this a protest? Fcking Europeans are all hippies.

And white people are all racists. Jeez, what's up with the generalisation?

No-one here is living in Greece and until the day you decide to move there you can't comment on people's right to protest against their government.

I don't agree with the violence but protests like these don't happen in a vacuum...the shooting of the 15 year-old may have been the catalyst but there are broader issues that people have been bitching about long before Saturday's tragedy.
 

Geriatrix

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What's wrong with communists and left wingers protesting the abuse of state power?

When they start chucking rocks and Molotov cocktails at people, when they start destroying public and private property and when they start setting fire to buildings.

They can protest all they want, but they are now just behaving like lunatics and vandals.
 

brixton tower

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lol they must have imported some of the ancyl to teach them :)

Sorry to disappoint you, the ANCYL are too fat to be protesting not to mention run from police. Please tell me when is the last time you saw Fikile Mbalula and his clone Julius Malema being chased by police.
 

Xarog

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Of course, if people were chucking molotov cocktails at zim's police, I'm sure all the people complaining in this thread would then be cheering the protesting b@stards on. ;)
 

Alan

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yes because clearly the Zim police are no different to the Greek police
 
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