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Europe
Riot police storm Acropolis
2010-10-15
RIOT police on Thursday stormed the Acropolis, Greece's best-known monument, to break up a blockade by protesting culture ministry staff that had kept the site shut this week.

The police broke into the monument perimeter through a side entrance and pursued dozens of protesters, who grabbed onto fence railings to prevent their removal from the hilltop site overlooking central Athens.

Police subsequently used tear gas to disperse media thronging the front entrance in order to surround the protesters. At least one protester was detained and the police were progressively evacuating the site as a number of tourists snapped pictures, an AFP photographer said. 'Most protesters have been evacuated from the site and have moved outside the perimeter,' a police spokeswoman said. 'There is no more tension.'

One tourist said he sympathised with the protesters' claims. 'I am OK with the protest, but from the other side, we came here to visit the Acropolis and we can't. This is of course bothering me. I hope that the problem will be solved today, that is what we were told,' said the man from Germany, who did not give his name.

The union representing temporary culture ministry staff began the blockade on Tuesday to protest the imminent dismissal of 320 fixed-term employees whose contracts expire at the end of the month. They also want the state to settle unpaid salaries which they say are worth five million euros (S$9 million) over two years.

The protesters had intended to blockade the Acropolis until October 31 and their union leader pledged on Thursday to continue the mobilisation. 'The protest will continue, the head of temporary ministry staff Nikos Hasomeris said after the police operation. 'The authorities must accept their responsibilities. Today they destroyed the archaeological site,' he said.
It's kind of hard to destroy the Acropolis, given that when it was an armory it was blown up...
Mr Hasomeris had earlier warned police not to break the blockade by force. 'All our colleagues stand beside us, so the monument will not operate today no matter what happens,' he told Mega television.
Posted by:Fred

#3  The Culture Ministry staff? Seriously?

Somebody notify Excitable Andy, I hear he's into Greek culture...
Posted by: mojo   2010-10-15 11:01  

#2  When the bulk of the population of Athens retired to Salamis and the 'wooden walls' of its fleet, the Persians stormed the Acropolis killing the hold outs and burning the place, in the processing clearing the place for the grand construction upon which its fame lives today. Insert allegory here if future Greece is to recover from the man made ruin it now finds itself in today.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2010-10-15 07:26  

#1  Germans, too, once stormed the Acropolis - hoisting a humongous Nazi Flag on it in '41. Mebbe that's why the German tourist was a bit reticent about giving his name.
Posted by: borgboy   2010-10-15 00:26  

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