Acropolis shut in dispute over unpaid wages

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  • Risto the Great
    Senior Member
    • Sep 2008
    • 15661

    Acropolis shut in dispute over unpaid wages



    Tourists on board a sightseeing bus yesterday morning snap pictures of the Acropolis. Up until noon, this was the only way they could catch a glimpse of the structure, as access was prevented by Culture Ministry employees.

    The Acropolis was again at the center of a dispute between unionists and the government yesterday, as unpaid Culture Ministry workers kept the site closed for four hours, turning away hundreds of tourists who had been hoping to make their way up the ancient citadel.

    The site had been due to open at 8 a.m. but the public was not actually admitted until noon, as Culture Ministry employees were protesting the government’s failure to pay some of their colleagues. The president of the workers’ association, Yiannis Tsakopiakos, said that the aim of the protest was to draw attention to the fact that some 500 employees on short-term contracts had not been paid for 21 months.

    Ministry sources responded by saying that everything possible was being done to ensure that the workers would get their money as soon as possible.

    The Acropolis was shut down earlier this summer when members of the Communist Party-affiliated union PAME used the site to stage a protest against the government’s economic reforms. Striking Culture Ministry workers also prevented visitors from accessing the ancient monument several times last summer during protests over outstanding wages.

    Unionists have been repeatedly criticized for using the Acropolis as a bargaining chip in their disputes with the government, amid fears that images of tourists being turned away from Greece’s most famous ancient site will only further harm tourism in a year when arrivals have already dropped. Yesterday’s protest came ahead of a four-hour stoppage tomorrow by air-traffic controllers, leading to more than 40 flights being canceled or rescheduled.

    There was no official comment from the government yesterday but Deputy Tourism Minister Giorgos Nikitiadis suggested that Greece’s tourism industry might benefit from last-minute bookings.

    However, the Acropolis protest has put the Culture Ministry in the spotlight as it planned to open 20 new or renovated museums this year, prompting many to ask what the point to this policy is when there is not enough staff to look after the museums and sites already in existence.

    Kathimerini, for instance, has learned that the archaeological museum on Delos does not open before noon because there is only one guard, who is also responsible for issuing boat tickets and who has been waiting for a transfer for the last two years due to poor health.
    Another strike for Greece (in more ways than one).
    Risto the Great
    MACEDONIA:ANHEDONIA
    "Holding my breath for the revolution."

    Hey, I wrote a bestseller. Check it out: www.ren-shen.com
  • Soldier of Macedon
    Senior Member
    • Sep 2008
    • 13676

    #2
    Another strike indeed, they just can't seem to get their act together, and the more that time goes by, the more is revealed at how dire the situation in Greece really is.
    In the name of the blood and the sun, the dagger and the gun, Christ protect this soldier, a lion and a Macedonian.

    Comment

    • fyrOM
      Banned
      • Feb 2010
      • 2180

      #3
      F the tourists. They are idiots for even stepping in Greece. Do they realise the Greeks theft is going to cost them years of higher taxes to cover their debts and they go there to give them more money. Like the Greeks say mind my interpretation nahh re.

      I would not go to Greece and avoid buying anything from Greece. Some might say it is how they can trade themselves out of a mess so holidaying there and buying Greek goods is the appropriate course of action. No its not. It wasn’t caused by some natural disaster or just bad world economic climate so you might be able to feel some sympathy for the Greeks. Remember their plight is due to 20 years of out and out theft in the billions while kicking it back and having a 20 year long party with 14 monthly salaries per year and generous pensions at an early retirement age at 50 years old. Tell me one other European that gets this. Do you. So why feel sorry for them for ripping you off for the past 20 years and continuing to rip you off for the next 10 years or more paying higher taxes and getting reduced services from your own government because you are paying off the Greeks debts. Wake up to yourself and say nahh re back.

      You are not dealing with like minded people. When put to a group of protesters striking against the government austerity measures that they were being greedy as other Europeans don’t get to retire at 50 years and have to keep working for another 15 years their only rely was you have to be young enough to enjoy your retirement. F the Greeks or F yourselves Europeans.

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