Amidst an angry Athens razing with
petrol bombs, a general strike, and defections in own rank the Papandreou
government in Greece has essentially collapsed as he offered to resign and form
a national government. Conflict of bankers’ interests is pushing the Greek
crisis further deep down while the finance-oligarchy is trying to prevent the
eurozone’s first ever default, and handing over the gift of hunger and
unemployment to the Greek people.
Producing a failure in the eurozone finance ministers’ Brussels
meeting to resolve the French-German row over the Greek crisis the future of
eurozone is now being feared. EU commissioners have a “profound sense of foreboding”
about Greece and the future of the eurozone. “[T]he markets would now ‘smell
blood’”. (BBC, Joe Lynam, June 15, 2011) Belgium and Spain are siding with
France and the ECB. Now, in Berlin, Sarkozy and Merkel will try to solidify
common, but competing interests. Soros assumes that there is effort to buy time
instead of tackling the Greek problems. “[T]hey are making a mistake”, said
Soros.
Stock markets across Europe were rattled as top European shares
fell and the US markets went down. Now, three European banks – Credit Agricole,
BNP Paribas and Societe Generale – face the threat of downgraded rating because
of their exposure to Greek debt. The euro posted its biggest percentage decline
against the dollar since last August.
While the Greek parliament witnessed fruitless debate on brutal
austerity measures aimed at the Greek people tens of thousands of
demonstrators, faced by violent police, besieged the parliament building.
Making a blanket of tear gas and flash bombs and injuring the demonstrators
were part of police-action. A crippling general strike, third in this year,
paralyzed ports, banks, hospitals and state-run companies that rocked the
government.
The Greek game, extrapolated by the growing rift between France
and Germany, being played by competing bankers triggered alarm across Europe.
The future of the euro and the eurozone are at stake. French and German banks
hold very high stakes, to the range of billions, in the Greek economy in deep
recession. The financial battleground is increasingly turning brutal.
Now, role of banks including Goldman Sachs are being questioned
again. With financial tricks they helped hide the extent of Greek deficit.
“[S]ome of those same banks were using credit default swaps to bet on the
likelihood of a fault, trades that had the effect of making it harder for
Greece to borrow, thereby pushing it closer to a financial cliff.”
Humiliation
Profit-hungry bankers, in their act of benevolence, are handing
over humiliation to the Greek people. Days ago, Papandreou said: “We will not
surrender.”
But the reality is opposite as bankers want to subjugate
everything, and Papandreou has no power to make an about turn from the destiny
the bankers decide. Greece is experiencing the same “thing” Third and Fourth
World countries experience: Humiliation.
Gavin Hewitt writes: “Greeks are being humiliated. … Their fate is being decided elsewhere, by unelected officials from the EU or the IMF. … One demonstrator spoke of a country ‘being torn to pieces’. The IMF and EU send in accountants and economists who occupy space in the finance ministry. When it comes to selling off state assets - intended to raise 50bn euros … - there is debate as to whether this should be overseen by a non-Greek body. It would have been the final humbling. There were suggestions, too, that foreigners should run Greek tax collection. Those ideas may have been sidelined but the resentment has not gone away.”
Gavin Hewitt writes: “Greeks are being humiliated. … Their fate is being decided elsewhere, by unelected officials from the EU or the IMF. … One demonstrator spoke of a country ‘being torn to pieces’. The IMF and EU send in accountants and economists who occupy space in the finance ministry. When it comes to selling off state assets - intended to raise 50bn euros … - there is debate as to whether this should be overseen by a non-Greek body. It would have been the final humbling. There were suggestions, too, that foreigners should run Greek tax collection. Those ideas may have been sidelined but the resentment has not gone away.”
“Some say that”, he continues, “Greece has become a
protectorate of the EU. Certainly the intervention from outside in Greece’s
internal affairs is unprecedented. The Greek Prime Minister, George Papandreou,
flies off to meetings to learn the terms of his surrender. He had promised no
more cuts, but in return for Greek Bail-out II he will have to take the axe to
public sector jobs. … State assets are being sold off. The crowds shout ‘we
won't sell!’ – but that’s precisely what the government has been told to do. …
Perhaps … German and European officials have spoken of Greece selling off its
islands.” (BBC, “Debt-laden Greece mired in anger and humiliation”, June 15,
2011)
Hunger & Suicide
“[T]here is a human cost. The social services organisation
Klimaka runs a food kitchen that feeds 3,000 people a day – many are now from
the middle classes. There are 30 calls a day to its suicide line. Some, like
former Prime Minister Stefanos Manos, warn of a social explosion.” (ibid.)
“The pain might have been endurable if it had worked. A year
after Greek Bail-out I (worth 110bn euros) Greece has seen industrial
production slump by 11%. Unemployment is up to 16%. The number of Greeks out of
work is up 40% from a year earlier. And the debt mountain has ballooned -
heading towards 153% of GDP.” Bankers’ interests never have worked in favor of
people.
This is the fate the finance-oligarchy plans to impose on
humanity. Yesterday, it was in African, Asian, Latin American countries. Today,
it is in Greece. And, tomorrow, it will be, probably, in Spain, Portugal,
Ireland, Georgia, Latvia, and in other lands. But, ultimately, the oligarchy is
feeding peoples’ anger, fueling psychology for resistance. And, it will indulge
in its acts till greater, wider, deeper and class-conscious revolt, free of
spontaneity, brings in ruins on the oligarchy, and thus frees it from a life of
sin.
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