German
Chancellor Angela Merkel said at a meeting with Greek Prime Minister Antonis
Samaras in Athens
on Tuesday that the “tough path” of punishing spending cuts will pay off, while
thousands took to the streets to protest her visit.
German Chancellor
Angela Merkel told Greece
on Tuesday that the "tough path" of painful spending cuts will pay
off, as tens of thousands of protesters massed in the capital in a show of
anger against her visit to the eurozone's most indebted nation.
Police fired tear gas
to disperse protesters attempting to storm a barricade just blocks away from
where Merkel was meeting with Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras, while small
gangs of masked youths threw bottles at riot police.
While the German
leader hailed the progress of reforms undertaken by Athens , 25,000 protesters brandishing banners
reading "You are not welcome, Imperialisten Raus" (Imperialists
out)" or "No to the Fourth Reich" vented their anger against the
budgetary discipline preached by the German leader.
Two
Nazi flags were draped on a steel barricade near parliament and set on fire.
Vilified
for the punishing spending cuts imposed in recession-hit Greece , Merkel, the leader of Europe 's
paymaster, is on her first visit to the country since the eurozone debt crisis
erupted almost three years ago.
Merkel
has become a hate figure in Greece
over the tough spending cuts imposed on the country in return for promised
loans and debt relief worth about 347 billion euros ($448 billion).
She has even been
depicted as Adolf Hitler in Greek tabloid caricatures.
On
her first visit to Greece in
five years, Merkel said: "I am deeply convinced that this tough path is
worth it and Germany
wants to be a good partner.
"A
lot has been achieved. There is still a lot to do and Germany and Greece will work very closely together,"
she added.
Samaras,
a conservative who took office after elections in June, responded: "Greece is
determined to keep its promises and overcome the crisis...the Greek people are
bleeding right now, but they are determined to win the battle of competitiveness."
Merkel's
visit 'pours oil on fire'
Merkel's
visit comes at a crucial time for Athens ,
which is locked in negotiations with its international creditors over a
13.5-billion-euro package of further cuts in order to win further bailout
funds.
Christina
Vassilopoulou, a 37-year-old teacher said she had turned up to protest
"the decisions taken at European meetings where Merkel manipulates the
participants".
"I
have a doctorate and I make 900 euros a month, 400 less than before. We have
children that go hungry and most of the parents are unemployed," she said.
Online
hackers group Anonymous said it had attacked a number of Greek government
sites.
"We,
as Anonymous, are next to the Greeks claiming their freedom. We are next to a
people who have fought against the German occupying forces," it said.
Vana
Koronaiou, a shop owner selling German-made handbags near Syntagma Square , said: "This visit
pours oil on the fire.
"If
she wanted to help, she should have done it sooner," she told AFP.
The
German chancellor is also scheduled to meet President Carolos Papoulias and a
delegation of Greek and German businessmen before departing in the evening.
Shortly before her
arrival, Greece 's
international creditors -- the International Monetary Fund, the European Union
and the European Central Bank -- piled further pressure on Athens to live up to its austerity pledges
made in exchange for crucial loans.
Greece
is counting on a positive outcome from the EU-IMF talks to unblock a
31.5-billion-euro installment from Greece's EU-IMF bailout package, which is
needed to recapitalise banks and repay outstanding domestic debts in a country
that is heading for a sixth straight year of recession.
Samaras
said Friday that his country could not take more bitter medicine and warned
that if the next aid tranche did not arrive soon, state coffers would be empty
by November. Greece 's
debt amounted to about 160 percent of gross domestic product in 2011, according
to official figures.
International
creditors on Monday gave Athens
an October 18 deadline -- the date of the next European Union summit -- to
implement reforms in exchange for slice of loan, which has been pending since
June.
"We
stressed that before the next disbursement, Greece clearly and credibly should
demonstrate its commitment to fully implement the programme -- and 89 prior
actions from March should be implemented by the 18th of October at the
latest," Eurogroup chairman Jean-Claude Juncker said at the close of talks
with finance ministers from the 17-nation single currency area
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