Greek protesters force cancellation of parade.They heckled President Karolos Papoulias and other attending officials, calling him a traitor.In several other Greek cities, officials were heckled and parades were canceled.
Thousands of anti-austerity protesters in Greece's second largest city forced the cancellation on Friday of an annual military parade commemorating the nation's entry into World War II, two days after Europe's leaders announced a strengthened financial rescue plan that includes bigger write-downs of Greek debt and new injections of capital into weakened European banks.
In Thessaloniki, the protesters blocked the parade route, forcing police to intervene and protect the officials' stand until it was evacuated. After waiting in the parade stand for about 30 minutes, Papoulias left, but not before launching a broadside against the protesters.
"When I was 15, I fought against Nazism and the German occupiers. Who are they calling me a traitor? Shame on them," Papoulias told reporters before leaving the parade stand. Papoulias, 82, joined the Greek resistance in 1944, during the last months of the three-year German occupation of Greece.
The protesters, have been the vast majority of the attendants of the parade,people fed up with the government's austerity policies
Asked if the protesters were justified, given the government's biting austerity measures and Greece's deep recession, Papoulias said the demonstrators represented "a small minority!!!!!!"
"The great mass of the people accept all these austerity measures that hit the weakest because they hope for a better day, when we will overcome the crisis and clean our house,!!!" the unbilievable man Papoulias, posing as a president of the country, said.
The protesters were tens of thousands of people who had come to watch the parade, making it difficult to push them back, police said.
In chaotic scenes after the officials left, some people tried to march as if the parade could be held, including retired military officers. Tensions rose when some citizens spat at them, but most protesters applauded the officers.
A student parade through Athens commemorating the day ended without a major incident, but all the citizens-protesters carried banners with slogans such as "No to the selling out of the country," and "Merkel equals Hitler," referring to German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who played a big role in negotiating the new euro-nation rescue plan.
The demonstrators were condemned by the government and the conservative opposition, but justified by the majority of the people around the country.
On Thursday, heavily indebted Greece was provided with a second bailout package worth euro130 billion ($184 billion) to stave off bankruptcy. A first package of euro110 billion ($156 billion) by the euro zone countries, the International Monetary Fund and the European Central Bank was agreed in May 2010 and has been partially disbursed.
stopcartel Newsdesk