Critics see Merkel as the main enforcer of
the European Union-imposed austerity measures that have left a large number of
Greeks unemployed and streaming to soup kitchens for a hot meal.
Police estimated that as many as 25,000
people turned out to demonstrate in central Athens , despite a ban on protests in certain
areas amid beefed-up security for Merkel's six-hour stay.
Merkel, who was making her first visit to Athens in several years, spoke of Greece as a partner and a friend to Germany
as she addressed reporters with Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras.
Merkel noted that Greece was going through a
"very difficult phase" in which many people were suffering, but she
insisted the debt-stricken nation had made progress in reducing its deficit and
passing reforms.
"It's
for this reason that I would like to say that a huge part of the journey has
already been accomplished," she said.
"Germany
and Greece are going to work
very closely together," she added, as fellow members of Europe
and the euro single currency.
Samaras, whose coalition government is
seeking new ways to implement budget cuts of 11.5 billion euros ($14.49
billion) to ensure the country receives another international bailout
installment this month, also stressed the strong ties between the two nations.
"The Greeks are proud and they know
how to show support for their friends, and we welcome a friend here
today," Samaras said of Merkel.
Merkel and Samaras met with Greek and
German business leaders following their joint news conference.
The crowds of protesters who gathered in Syntagma Square , by
the Greek parliament building, had largely dispersed by Tuesday evening. Earlier,
a number of people were arrested after objects were thrown at riot police.
Many protesters, some of whom belong to
labor unions and Syriza, the radical-left opposition party, carried anti-Merkel
banners.
"Merkel we are a free nation and not
your colony," said one banner. Another read, "Merkel Raus (out, in
German). Murderer of 3,500 Greeks," a reference to the number of Greeks
who have taken their own lives, according to some estimates, as a result of the
current hardship.
Before her visit, Merkel told CNN she
knows the austerity measures have been hard on some.
"It's very bitter obviously,
sacrifices need to be made," she said. "But I think these are
necessary measures that have to be taken, I think it was not easy for anyone to
impose those measures on them, but these, I think, have been made on the
background of great experience."
Analysts say that for Merkel, who faces a
general election next year, the Athens trip also
sends a message back home that she views Greece
as an integral part of Europe .
While some within her own governing
coalition have spoken of the need for contingency plans for a possible Greek
exit from the euro, Merkel has signaled that she would view that outcome as
extremely risky. However, many German taxpayers are opposed to committing more
European funds to Greece .
In return for international bailout funds,
Greece
has agreed to the austerity program and labor market reforms -- measures that
have led to violent street demonstrations in the past.
Speaking in Syntagma Square , Syriza leader Alexis
Tsipras said Merkel had come to Athens
in support of Samaras and his ministers "while the people are on their
knees ahead of new, barbaric measures."
But, he said, her visit would allow the
Greek people to send a message to the rest of Europe
that they were stronger than those supporting the bankers and bailouts.
"The democratic tradition of Europe
will not allow a European people, the Greek people, to be transformed into a
crisis 'guinea pig' and for Greece
to become a vast social cemetery. We will win in the end, because we are right
and we are many," he said.
To comply with the belt-tightening
measures, salaries have been cut for many workers in Greece , pensions and benefits have
been slashed, and unemployment rates have soared.
As of May, 53.8% of Greeks younger than 25
were unemployed, according to Eurostat, the statistics division of the European
Commission.
A number of those who demonstrated in Athens on Tuesday said it
was the first time they had taken to the streets to protest the economic crisis
-- a reflection, perhaps, of how widely the anger over austerity is now felt.
Many of the protesters were retirees, a
group that has lost, in many cases, more than 30% of its income since the
crisis hit. Retirees are also among the groups that will be most affected by
the new measures to which Greece
must agree in order to receive the next tranche of its international bailout
loan.
Maria Kirioni, a 53-year-old civil
servant, told CNN she was protesting for the first time since she was a
university student. "Merkel does not know what is going on in Greece . She
only hears the politicians' voices. We must show her. It would be better if she
stayed longer to see the reality," Kirioni said.
Stella Gianakopoulou, a 56-year-old
schoolteacher who lived in Wupertal , Germany , for 18 years, said: "Merkel will
cause the eruption of Greek society, and then this will spread throughout
southern Europe . This may lead to a eurozone
collapse."
But Rafael Voulgarakis, a university
student, welcomed the German chancellor's visit. "It is clearly positive,
because as we know, Germany
is the largest power in Europe at the moment
and one of the largest powers in the world," he said. "It is clear
that the support of Ms. Merkel is good for our country and is needed."
CNN iReporter Margaret Roesler, from Minnesota , saw the
buildup to the protest. "It seemed like a fairly tense atmosphere,"
she said. "The main road near our apartment was absolutely deserted, seems
like everything shut down for the day. Someone told us to use extreme caution
and to leave as soon as possible, which we did."
German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle
told Bild newspaper last week that Greece deserves "fairness and
respect." He suggested that Merkel's visit represents a show of eurozone
solidarity between nations that are fiscally healthy and those that are
debt-ridden and battling savage cuts and social unrest.
Christoph Weil, a senior economist at
Commerzbank, told CNN that Merkel's visit to Athens
comes as a "surprise" and that there was "a significant risk
that Greece
will exit the euro in the next two years."
However, Wolfango Piccoli, director of
Eurasia Group, says that the risk of a Greek exit from the eurozone remains
"marginal" at the moment and that the so-called troika -- the
European Commission, European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund --
will provide Greece
with the next tranche of bailout funds to meet its debt obligations.
But Piccoli warns that the country will have
to undergo stringent austerity measures before creditors will release any
funds.
"The vast majority will come from an
additional round of cuts to wages and pensions. It's going to be almost 8
billion euros of the 13.5 billion euros coming from that. The total cut is 11.5
billion euros and then 2 billion euros of additional taxes," he told CNN.
On Monday, the Eurogroup -- a meeting of
eurozone finance ministers -- convened in Luxembourg to give the green light
to the European Stability Mechanism, the 17-nation currency bloc's permanent
bailout fund.
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