Greece's Athens In the Greek capital

Started by bosman, 2025-02-28 13:47

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Breaking: Greece's Athens In the Greek capital, what began as a nonviolent demonstration with hundreds of thousands of participants has descended into a full-scale riot. The people of Europe have had enough of their treasonous, sell-out globalist governments.
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The demonstrations on Friday mirrored growing indignation over the catastrophe in Greece, where public services were underfunded and millions of people lost their jobs and pensions due to a 2009–2018 debt crisis that led to widespread mistrust of the government.Police in riot gear watched as tens of thousands of people gathered in the heart of Athens by early morning. Christos Main, 57, a guitarist at the march in Athens, stated, "The government hasn't done anything to get justice." He declared, "This was murder, not an accident." Another demonstrator, Evi, claimed that she was there to grieve for the deceased as well as "because the government has tried to cover things up." Red spray paint was used to write the names of the deceased on the parliament building. Groups of people of all ages marched through the Athens suburbs with signs that read, "I have no oxygen," the protests' catchphrase that echoed a woman's final words as she called for help. Many students wore black to class as a sign of sadness. Black balloons were held up by others. Mitsotakis stated in a Facebook post on Friday that his government would endeavour to modernize and secure the railway system.He wrote about the night of the catastrophe, "That night, we saw the ugliest face of the country in the national mirror." "Persistent state deficiencies combined with fatal human errors." Opposition parties have called for the government to resign and accused it of hiding evidence. Parliament will meet next week. ground in front of the anticipated to discuss whether to form a committee to look into any political involvement in the catastrophe. According to a survey conducted this week by Pulse pollsters, 66% of Greeks expressed dissatisfaction with the accident investigations, and 82% of them stated that the train disaster was "one of the most" or "the most" serious issue in the nation. Students in Athens shouted, "Text me when you get there," which was the last message that many of the victims' family members sent them. Litsa, a 45-year-old nurse, stated, "We're here because we're parents... tomorrow it might be our children."
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Source @Citizen

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