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Thread: Greek-Inspired Demonstrations Spread

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    Default Greek-Inspired Demonstrations Spread

    Putting this here since it involves a number of our NATO allies and seems to be organized by far left groups.

    Greek-Inspired Demonstrations Spread
    As Greece suffered through its sixth day of violence Thursday, there were troubling signs of unrest spreading across Europe.

    Angry youths smashed shop windows, attacked banks and hurled bottles at police in small but violent protests in Spain and Denmark, while cars were set alight outside a consulate in France.

    Authorities say the incidents have been isolated so far, but acknowledge concern that the Greek riots — which started over the police killing of a 15-year-old on Saturday — could be a trigger for anti-globalization groups and others outraged by economic turmoil and a lack of job opportunities.

    "What's happening in Greece tends to prove that the extreme left exists, contrary to doubts of some over these past few weeks," French Interior Ministry spokesman Gerard Gachet told The Associated Press. "For the moment, we can't go farther with our conclusions and say that there's a danger of contagion of the Greek situation into France. All of that is being watched."

    "What's happening in Greece tends to prove that the extreme left exists, contrary to doubts of some over these past few weeks," French Interior Ministry spokesman Gerard Gachet told The Associated Press. "For the moment, we can't go farther with our conclusions and say that there's a danger of contagion of the Greek situation into France. All of that is being watched."

    As Europe plunges into recession, unemployment is rising, particularly among the young. Even before the crisis, European youths complained about difficulty finding well paid jobs — even with a college degree — and many said they felt left out as the continent grew in prosperity.

    At least some of the protests appear to have been organized over the Internet, showing how quickly a message can be spread, particularly among tech-savvy youth. One website that Greek protesters have been using to update each other claims there have been sympathy protests in nearly 20 countries.

    "We're encouraging nonviolent action here and abroad," said Konstantinos Sakkas, a 23-year-old protester at the Athens Polytechnic, where many of the demonstrators are based. "What these are abroad are spontaneous expressions of solidarity with what's going on here."

    In Denmark, protesters pelted riot police with bottles and paint in downtown Copenhagen at a rally late Wednesday. Some 63 people were detained and later released.

    And in Spain, angry youths attacked banks, shops and a police station in separate demonstrations in Madrid and Barcelona late Wednesday that each drew about 200 people.

    Some of the protesters chanted "police killers" and other slogans. Eleven people — including a Greek girl — were arrested at the two rallies, and two police officers were lightly injured.

    The Barcelona daily La Vanguardia said the protests had been convened over the Internet.

    Daniel Lostao, president of the state-financed Youth Council, an umbrella organization of Spanish youth groups, said young people in Spain face daunting challenges — soaring unemployment, low salaries and difficulty in leaving the family nest because of expensive housing.

    Still, he said he doubted the protests in Spain would grow.

    "We do not have the feeling that this is going to spread," Lostao said. "Let's hope I am not wrong."

    In France, protesters set fire to two cars and a garbage can apparently stuffed with flammable material outside the Greek consulate in Bordeaux early Thursday and scrawled graffiti on the building threatening more unrest, Michel Corfias, the Greek consul, told The Associated Press.

    "It was a very, very intense fire," Corfias said, adding that it severely damaged the building's front door.

    Graffiti sprayed on the consulate's garage door read "solidarity with the fires in Greece, the insurrection to come," he said, and the word "insurrection" was painted on the doors of neighboring houses.

    Corfias said police suspect the attack is linked to events in Greece, and that it might have been carried out by youths unhappy with globalization and economic difficulties in France.

    "The events in Greece are a pretext, in my opinion," he said. "The events in Greece are a trigger."

    Elsewhere in Europe, more than 15 people occupied a Greek consulate in Berlin on Monday, hanging a banner out the window with the dead Greek teenager's name and the words, "Killed by the State." Youths clad in black appeared occasionally at a consulate balcony, exchanging chants with more than 50 protesters gathered on the street below.

    About 100 people protested outside the Greek consulate in Frankfurt on Tuesday evening and minor violence was reported on the peripheries of the demonstration, including the breaking of a bank's window.

    In Italy, a group of protesters gathered in front of the Greek Embassy in Rome on Wednesday and some turned violent, damaging police vehicles, overturning a car and setting a trash can on fire.

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    Default Re: Greek-Inspired Demonstrations Spread

    Greek Communist Party Members Involved In Rioting In Greece; Affiliated With Another Far Left Coalition

    Date Posted: Tuesday 09-Dec-2008

    It's certainly no major reason why it seems Marxist radicals in Greece would riot over the death of a Greek teen at the hands of police. I have heard similar threats of America's local Marxist radicals such as Charles Barron over the death of an African-American man by New York police. These same Marxist ilk wouldn't mind having this repeated in major American cities.

    Something for which I'm sure people like Barron might be watching the riots in Greece being promoted secretly by members of the Greek Communist Party and also a far left opposition coalition known as the Coalition of the Radical Left which is made up of "former" members of the Greek Communist Party:

    Greek Police Battle Protesters in 4th Day of Unrest (Update1)
    By Maria Petrakis

    Dec. 9 (Bloomberg) -- Greek police used tear gas to disperse stone-throwing protesters outside the country’s parliament, in a fourth day of unrest after a boy was killed by security forces. Skirmishes also occurred at the teenager’s funeral.

    Police surrounded the parliament house in the center of Athens, pushing back against thousands of teachers and students trying to break the cordon, Antenna TV showed. Police responded with tear gas after protesters threw stones and debris at the helmet-clad officers.

    As calm returned to the city center, Skai TV showed scenes of police chasing protesters throwing rocks in the streets of Nea Smyrni, a residential southern suburb of Athens after the funeral of the 15-year-old boy, shot dead by police Dec. 6.

    Authorities in the country are battling a fourth day of clashes around the country after the youth, Alexis Grigoropoulos, was killed. The opposition socialist party, Pasok, called on supporters to hold peaceful protests against violence at 7 p.m.

    Police in Athens fired tear gas and dragged away protesters last night as demonstrators rampaged through the capital, torching stores, banks and hotel lobbies in the worst violence in decades. The fighting erupted in the wake of marches organized by the opposition Syriza movement and the Communist Party of Greece. Greece’s ruling New Democracy government, which is fighting declining voter popularity, has pledged a swift investigation into the circumstances of the shooting.

    Prime Minister Kostas Karamanlis, who has been in office since March 2004, huddled with his inner Cabinet yesterday and met today with leaders of the four parliamentary opposition parties, as well as the president of the republic. Another cabinet meeting was scheduled for midday.

    Christmas Tree

    Students set fire to a Christmas tree in Syntagma Square in front of parliament and looted duty-free stores in neighboring streets. The lobby of the Athens Plaza Hotel, located on the square, was torched as were branches of Bank Millennium SA and Olympic Airways SA. Rioters burned down a post office located hundreds of meters from Athens’ ancient Parthenon temple. The letters “R.I.P.” were spray-painted on the wall of the Grande Bretagne Hotel.

    “No one has the right to use this tragic event as an alibi for acts of raw violence,” Karamanlis, 52, told reporters in Athens today after meeting with President Karolos Papoulias. He reiterated that there would be “no clemency” for the perpetrators. “In these critical times, the political world is obliged unanimously and unequivocally to condemn these expressions of catastrophe and to isolate them.”

    Patrol Car Attacked

    Papoulias called for calm today as Grigoropoulos was laid to rest. Grigoropoulos was killed after a group of about 30 teenagers hurling projectiles attacked a patrol car in the Exarhia district of Athens, according to the Interior Ministry.

    Two policemen parked the car and went to arrest the group on foot, the police said. When they were attacked again, one officer fired three shots, hitting the boy.

    “The state will do what it can to prevent a repeat of this tragedy,” Karamanlis said. “Those responsible will receive the punishment they deserve.”

    The officer who fired the shots was charged with murder and illegal use of a weapon while his colleague will be charged with being an accomplice to the killing, state-controlled Athens News Agency reported.

    About 1,000 youths rampaged through central Athens, burning and attacking banks, stores and cars, shortly after the shooting. The riots spread to other cities, including Thessaloniki and the island of Crete.

    Vandalism, Looting

    Rioting continued into the early hours today and police said 87 people were arrested in Athens for attacking officers, vandalism and looting. A total of 176 people were detained while 12 police were injured, police said.

    The fire service responded to more than 200 blazes in central Athens yesterday, about half of them in buildings and the remainder in cars and garbage bins used as barricades, the Associated Press said.

    High schools are shut today as are many public services, to mark the teenager’s funeral.

    Prokopis Pavlopoulos, the interior and public order minister, tendered his resignation after the shooting, though it wasn’t accepted. He said this weekend the government was determined to protect the property and lives of Greek citizens.

    University professors have already called a three-day strike. Greece’s two main labor groups had previously scheduled a general strike tomorrow in protest at the government’s economic policies.

    Pitched Battles

    Pitched battles between police and students and anarchist groups are frequent in Greece, particularly in the capital. New Democracy party policies including changes to the state-run education system have fueled tensions.

    Demands from students and teachers range from more public spending on education and higher wages for teachers to opposition to government plans to recognize privately run colleges.

    The Dec. 6 shooting occurred in a neighborhood where police regularly clash with students.

    The area is adjacent to the National Technical University of Athens, or Polytechnic, the site of the 1973 student uprising against the military junta that ruled Greece at the time.

    The popularity of New Democracy, which has 151 of parliament’s 300 seats, has slid since the government announced new tax measures in September, while the global financial crisis prevents it from providing relief to lower-income groups. Opinion polls since September show the opposition Panhellenic Socialist Movement, led by George Papandreou, leading New Democracy for the first time in eight years. Papandreou, 56, is the son of Andreas Papandreou, a former prime minister.

    Many Crises

    “The country doesn’t have a government which can protect the citizen, their rights, their security,” Papandreou said today, after meeting with Karamanlis. “Our society, our citizens are living through a multiple crisis: economic, social, institutional, of values. The government has lost the confidence of the Greek people.”

    Karamanlis introduced new taxes on dividends, stock options, self-employed workers and small businesses to boost revenue as slowing growth and higher inflation and interest rates hamper the government’s ability to meet budget targets.

    The economy is being buffeted by the global credit crisis and a recession in Germany, the euro zone’s largest economy.

    “In the Greece of New Democracy, being young is a felony,” said Alekos Alavanos, the head of Syriza’s parliament group. Young people are afflicted by “unemployment, insecurity, with the invasion of profit in education, the lack of ambition and prospects. New Democracy can no longer remain the government of the country.”
    Source URL: http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?p...Q&refer=europe

    Posted By: Lone Wolf
    *AfricanCrisis Volunteer*
    (Middle East/Terrorism/Communist Specialist)


    http://www.africancrisis.co.za/Article.php?ID=39690&

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    Default Re: Greek-Inspired Demonstrations Spread

    These riots are being allowed to continue by the government. Nothing stops a riot quite as well as when the police start dropping rioters with live rounds. Which is exactly what the government could order done if it wanted these riots over.

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    Default Re: Greek-Inspired Demonstrations Spread

    It appears to me that the Left in that country is pushing people to riot over this.

    The kid was a criminal, attacking cops, throwing things at them.

    So, if you want the current government out of office, you use this criminal kid as an example and whip people into a frenzy, causing riots. You see, this will allow the Left to take over.

    Kind of like what they do in this country with their lies.
    Libertatem Prius!


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    Default Re: Greek-Inspired Demonstrations Spread

    It seems that is how most of the recent riots have started... France 2006, L.A. 1992, Cincinnati 2001...

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    Default Re: Greek-Inspired Demonstrations Spread

    Not sure if this belongs here so Mods move where needed...

    Breaking - Violent Protests/Riots Moldova -Pics & Vid - Summer of Rage Continues

    Violent Protests Erupt in Moldova




    MOSCOW -- A protest in the Moldovan capital, Chisinau, turned violent on Tuesday as anti-Communist demonstrators broke into the headquarters of the country’s parliament and the police attempted to disperse them with tear gas and water cannon. Dozens of people were reported injured.

    The crowd gathered to protest the results of parliamentary elections held on Sunday. Communists won about half the votes. Opposition leaders on Tuesday accused the Communists of rigging the election and demanded a recount.

    Demonstrators gathered in the center of Chisinau, shouting “We want Europe,” “We are Romanians” and “Down with Communism,” according to the Interfax news service.

    Moldova was part of Romania until 1940, then was occupied by the Soviet Union until it declared independence in 1991. Independence ushered in instability and catastrophic economic conditions, and in 2001 angry citizens voted the Communist Party back into power, making it the first post-Soviet state to do so.

    Protests were convened on Monday night after the election results were announced, and police officials told the Interfax news service that demonstrators had confronted the police and tried to overturn vehicles. On Tuesday the crowds gathered again, picketing the Election Commission headquarters, the president’s residence, and other government buildings.

    News broadcasts showed columns of police shielding their heads as protesters threw objects at them, and dispersing the crowd with water cannon.

    The crowd is demanding that President Vladimir Voronin announce his resignation and leave Moldova, Interfax reported. Mr. Voronin is scheduled to step down as president, but the newly elected Communist parliament will almost certainly appoint a Communist to succeed him.

    Javier Solana, chief of foreign policy for the European Union, said he was “very concerned” about the situation. He said that election observers had reported that the April 5 polls met many international standards, but that there had still been “undue administrative interference” and a lack of public confidence. The observers have documented complaints that the state dominated television

    coverage during the campaign, virtually banishing opposition politicians

    from the airwaves.

    “I call on all sides to refrain from violence and provocation,” Mr. Solana said, in a statement. “Violence against government buildings is unacceptable. Equally important is the respect for the inalienable right of assembly of peaceful demonstrators.”






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    Default Re: Greek-Inspired Demonstrations Spread


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    Nikita Khrushchev: "We will bury you"
    "Your grandchildren will live under communism."
    “You Americans are so gullible.
    No, you won’t accept
    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.
    outright, but we’ll keep feeding you small doses of
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    until you’ll finally wake up and find you already have communism.

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    ."
    We’ll so weaken your
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    like overripe fruit into our hands."



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    Default Re: Greek-Inspired Demonstrations Spread


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    Nikita Khrushchev: "We will bury you"
    "Your grandchildren will live under communism."
    “You Americans are so gullible.
    No, you won’t accept
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    outright, but we’ll keep feeding you small doses of
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    until you’ll finally wake up and find you already have communism.

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    We’ll so weaken your
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    like overripe fruit into our hands."



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    Default Re: Greek-Inspired Demonstrations Spread

    Ok, so these are anti-commie riots! Yay rioters! Lol.
    "Far better it is to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs even though checkered by failure, than to rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy nor suffer much because they live in the gray twilight that knows neither victory nor defeat."
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    Default Re: Greek-Inspired Demonstrations Spread

    SNAP ANALYSIS: Moldovan riots have deep political roots

    Tue Apr 7, 2009 4:43pm EDT
    CHISINAU (Reuters) - One woman was killed and over 100 were injured in ex-Soviet Moldova on Tuesday as protesters rioted in the capital against the ruling Communists and demanded a recount of Sunday's election, won by the government.

    President Vladimir Voronin described the rioters' actions as an attempted coup and urged Moldova's authorities to defend democracy.

    Following is a snap analysis of the Moldovan crisis.

    * The riots in Moldova reflect deeply entrenched differences in Europe's poorest state, most of which was once part of Romania. There is a gulf between those who favor Moldovan independence and the political stability achieved under Voronin and those who want Moldova to integrate with Europe and possibly reunite with Romania.

    * The protesters say the Communists, who maintained their control over parliament after winning around 50 percent of the vote in Sunday's parliamentary election, falsified the results. They say the Communists endanger Moldova's European future and have demanded a recount.

    * Leaders of Moldova's pro-Western opposition parties have denounced Sunday's polls but have distanced themselves from the rioters, saying they want to achieve their goals by peaceful means.

    * Monitors from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe said on Monday the elections were democratic. Voronin used this endorsement to argue that the riots were an attempted coup d'etat and violated democracy.

    * The unrest in Chisinau prompted comparisons with popular post-election revolts in ex-Soviet Georgia in 2003 and Ukraine in 2004, which brought to power pro-Western governments in those countries. Governments' fear of such revolutions has become a major factor in the politics of the former Soviet Union.

    * The riots are likely to have a strong impact on Moldova's efforts to settle its dispute with Transdniestria, a predominantly Russian-speaking province which broke away from Moldova amid the collapse of the Soviet Union, fearing Moldova might merge with Romania.

    * Originally warm relations with Russia cooled by the end of Voronin's first four-year term in 2005 after Moldova rejected a Russian-backed peace plan with the Transdniestria separatists and accused the Kremlin of backing them.

    * Voronin, who is to step down after Sunday's poll because the constitution does not allow a third term, is seeking closer ties with Europe while maintaining good relations with key economic partner Russia, which is the main gas supplier.

    * Moldova has recently become a member of the European Union's "Eastern Partnership," a project designed to establish close links with some ex-Soviet states without granting them EU membership. The riots could damage the image of pro-Western forces in Moldova.

    * Russia congratulated Voronin on his election win. In a clear message of support, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev urged the country to stick to election law and to its constitution to solve the latest crisis.

    (Reporting by Oleg Shchedrov; editing by Andrew Roche)

    © Thomson Reuters 2009. All rights reserved.

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    Nikita Khrushchev: "We will bury you"
    "Your grandchildren will live under communism."
    “You Americans are so gullible.
    No, you won’t accept
    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.
    outright, but we’ll keep feeding you small doses of
    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.
    until you’ll finally wake up and find you already have communism.

    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.
    ."
    We’ll so weaken your
    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.
    until you’ll
    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.
    like overripe fruit into our hands."



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