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Greek unions launch fall protests against job cuts

Published:Friday | August 30, 2013 | 12:00 AM
Protesters chant slogans during a rally organised by Greece's ADEDY main public sector union, in central Athens, on Thursday, August 29, 2013. Hundreds of state employees took part in the rally and held a four-hour work stoppage to protest planned mandatory public sector-employee transfers and suspensions as part of the government's harsh austerity drive. -AP

ATHENS (AP):Unions representing government workers are staging work stoppages across Greece, launching a fall protest campaign against government plans to axe thousands of state jobs as part of its cost-cutting commitments to international lenders.

Yesterday's protest by the civil servants' union, ADEDY, caused most public services to close early but saw no major disruption, while several hundred protesters marched peacefully to parliament.

Unions are threatening to organise major protests in September against the conservative-led government, which is planning to suspend up to 50,000 public servants this year and fire 15,000 by the end of 2014. Teaching unions were meeting yesterday to plan strikes expected to disrupt the start of the new school year.

Recession-hit Greece has struggled through years of harsh austerity measures demanded by bailout lenders.