By Anthee
Carassava, in Athens, news.sky.com
2:19 pm UK,
Wednesday 18 September 2013
Thousands
of civil servants in Greece have taken to the streets in protest against
looming jobs cuts, as a 34-year-old anti-racist hip hop artist was stabbed to
death by a neo-Nazi.
Described by politicians and police as one
of the worst shows of political violence in decades, the rapper's murder sent
shock waves across a country that has seen the extreme-right Golden Dawn party
surge in popularity since its election to parliament last year.
Authorities told Sky News that a 45-year-old
member of the neo-Nazi party had confessed to the brutal stabbing hours after
he was arrested and taken to police headquarters in central Athens. "We
are now conducting police raids at the party’s main headquarters in
Athens," a senior police official said.
Local media said Pavlos Fyssas - otherwise
known as Killah P - was ambushed by a mob of youths dressed in black after an
altercation at a football cafe in the working class district of Keratsini, west
of the Greek capital. "As he moved to leave the building the assailant
emerged from a crowd, stabbing him twice in the heart," said a senior
police officer. Protesters from the state social insurance funds shout slogans
during a rally outside the labour ministry in Athens A protester addresses a
rally outside the Labour Ministry in Athens.
Reports said Fyssas managed to whisper the
name of his killer to his girlfriend before being taken to a local hospital,
where he died of his wounds. The attack comes less than a week after teams of
around 50 men wielding crowbars and bats set upon a group of communist steel
workers as they distributed posters near the port of Perama.
Golden Dawn immediately denied any involvement, but authorities fear the incident will exacerbate an already explosive social situation in Greece. Police said they were taken urgent security measures to shield protests against Golden Dawn. High-school students shout slogans during an anti-government rally in Athens High-school students at an anti-government rally in Athens.
Meanwhile, more than 9,000 workers, some
waving black flags and banners reading "No to firings!", flooded the
street in front of parliament in Syntagma Square, the focal point of
anti-austerity protests. It was the first stoppage ever to hit Greece’s bloated
and costly civil sector.
The 48-hour strike has affected all public
services across the country. Schools and courts have closed, while hospitals
have been forced to operate with just emergency staff. Trains were due to stop
running for four hours. Journalists suspended industrial action and a media
blackout to cover the attack on Fyssas.
Hit
hard by the economic crisis, Greece is experiencing a sixth consecutive year of
recession which experts fear is fuelling an increase in violence. The latest
strikes, called by the public sector umbrella union ADEDY, come days before the
"troika" of European Union, European Central Bank and International
Monetary Fund lenders visit Athens to check on progress made on promised
reforms.
The troika has bailed out Greece to the tune
of 240 bn euros (£ 201 bn) but has warned it will stop payments unless Athens
pushes forward with plans to tackle deep-rooted corruption in the state
apparatus.
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