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Greece finally OKs unpopular reforms

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By Helene Colliopoulou

ATHENS, Greece—Greek lawmakers adopted a controversial package of pension cuts and tax hikes as eurozone finance ministers geared up for an emergency meeting Monday to hammer out fresh reforms for Athens to stave off another eurozone crisis.

The ministers are expected to complete a long-stalled first review of Greece’s massive EU-IMF bailout and discuss new debt relief measures at the crunch meeting in Brussels, which follows mass public opposition to the newly adopted measures in the cash-strapped country.

The talks have already suffered months of delays and Greece wants to wrap them up as quickly as possible so that it can unlock the next tranche of its 86-billion-euro ($95 billion) bailout—the third for the debt-laden country since 2010—ahead of a huge European Central Bank payment due in July.

Lawyers shout slogans during a demonstration against the latest reform measures demanded by Greece’s creditors, in front of the Greek parliament building, in Athens on May 8, 2016.

In its official agenda the ministers from the 19 countries that use the euro—the Eurogroup—said they would discuss the “progress achieved” by Greek and creditor officials in recent days on the reforms, “with a view to conclude them as soon as possible.”

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It added that it would “also discuss possible debt relief measures aiming at ensuring that Greece’s gross financing needs remain at a sustainable level, with a view to reach a political agreement.”

The meeting follows days of protests in Greece, where tens of thousands took to the streets to slam the unpopular reforms adopted Sunday. 

The measures were passed thanks to the Syriza-led government’s slim majority in the 300-seat parliament, with the 153 MPs of the far-left Syriza and the Independent Greeks coalition voting in favor of the measures.

As expected all the opposition parties voted against the bill, which will reduce Greece’s highest pension payouts, merge several pension funds, increase contributions and raise taxes for those on medium and high incomes.

In the run-up to the parliamentary debate, angry unions staged a general strike that paralyzed public transport for a third straight day Sunday, while some 26,000 people took to the streets of Athens and Greece’s second city Thessaloniki in protest at the pensions and tax overhaul.

Brief clashes erupted outside the parliament in Athens ahead of the vote, with youths throwing Molotov cocktails and flares at riot police who responded with volleys of tear gas, AFP reporters saw.

Numbers were, however, significantly down on February protests when 40,000 people marched in Athens alone.

“People are tired and disappointed by the leftist government in power… the rallies have not had the scale we had expected,” said Maria, a private sector employee in her fifties who claims to be owed 30,000 euros ($34,000) in back pay from her employer.

Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, who has said reform is needed to prevent the pension system collapsing in a few years, defended the changes in parliament earlier Sunday, which are part of the government’s pledge to achieve 5.4 billion euros in spending cuts by 2018.

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