Express & Star

Greek workers hold general strike over high cost of living

Workers have called for collective wage agreements.

By contributor By AP Reporters
Published
Commuters stand outside the closed main metro Syntagma station
Metro stations were closed during the strike (AP)

Greek public and private sector workers have walked out in a 24-hour general strike that is disrupting services across the country.

Public transport in the capital has been suspended for several hours and ferries that connect the islands to the mainland are tied up in port during the industrial action.

Medical staff at state-run hospitals and teachers are also participating in the strike, called by unions in protest over the high cost of living.

They have demanded collective wage agreements that were scaled back during Greece’s nearly decade-long financial crisis that began in 2010.

Commuters stand outside the closed main metro Syntagma station
Thousands of public and private sector workers have taken part in the strike (AP)

Journalists at Greek media outlets held their own 24-hour strike in support on Tuesday, pulling all news broadcasts off the air for the day, so they could cover Wednesday’s general strike.

Protest marches were planned for central Athens later on Wednesday.

Unions have criticised the centre-right government of Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis for failing to tackle inflation and housing policies, which have eroded workers’ living standards.

Greece’s financial crisis saw a quarter of the country’s economy wiped out after decades of profligate spending left it locked out of international bond markets.

Successive international bailouts came on condition the country implement deeply unpopular reforms that included pension and wage cuts that saw poverty and unemployment rates spiral.

Greece has since returned to healthy growth and recently achieved investment-grade status again, but it still retains the highest debt-to-GDP ratio in the European Union.

Sorry, we are not accepting comments on this article.