People in
Greece are going to referendum on July 5 to deliver their verdict on the
question: Shall bankers be allowed to blackmail or no?
Alexis Tsipras, the Greek prime minister, has proposed the referendum on the Eurogroup’s austerity proposals.
In an address to the nation,
Tsipras referred to the Eurogroup’s proposals with an ultimatum as
blackmail-ultimatum, and said: “To this blackmail-ultimatum, for the
acceptance on our part of a strict and humiliating austerity (proposal),
and with no end to it in sight nor with the prospect of allowing us to
ever stand on our feet economically or socially, I call upon you to
decide sovereignly and proudly, as the history of Greeks dictates.”
Tsipras’ address presented in brief the background of the creditors’ acts:
“For the past six months the
Greek government has been giving battle in conditions of unprecedented
economic asphyxiation, to implement your mandate, of Jan. 25. It was a
mandate to negotiate with our partners to end austerity and to restore
prosperity and social justice to our country.
“(It was) for a viable agreement
which would respect both democracy, common European rules and would
lead to a definitive exit from the crisis.
“Throughout this negotiation
period, we were asked to adopt bailout agreements which were agreed with
previous governments, even though these were categorically condemned by
the Greek people in the recent elections.
“But we did not, even for a moment, contemplate yielding. That is, to effectively betray your own trust.
“After five months of tough
negotiations our partners, unfortunately, concluded at the Eurogroup the
day before last with a proposal, an ultimatum, to the Hellenic Republic
and the Greek people.
“An ultimatum which contravenes the founding principles and values of Europe. The value of our common European structure.”
Rumors of surrender by and
skepticism about Tsipras’ and the Greek finance minister Yanis
Varoufakis’ position were spread over the last few months. There was
planned propaganda to ridicule them. A part of mainstream media showed
its taste as it tried to mock and vilify Varoufakis.
But it appears, unprincipled
compromise has still not been made. On the contrary, theirs is a
position of upholding the interests of the people of Greece.
Tsipras’ address details the bankers’ blackmailing proposals:
“The Greek government was asked
to accept a proposal which accumulates unbearable new burdens on the
Greek people and undermines the recovery of Greek society and its
economy, not only maintaining uncertainty, but by amplifying social
imbalances even further.
“The proposals of the
institutions include measures which lead to a further detribalization of
the labor market, pension cutbacks, new reductions in public sector
salaries and an increase in VAT on food, eateries and tourism, with an
elimination of tax breaks on the islands.”
A statement by Varoufakis makes
it clear. “Over the past days and weeks”, said Varoufakis in an
interview, “the Greek government has been making concessions
continuously. Unfortunately, every time we make a concession and we get
three quarters of the way, the institutions do the exact opposite, they
toughen their stance.” On another occasion, he said Greece has bent over
backwards in order to accommodate strange demands of the creditors. He
was talking to Irish radio station RTE.
The situation led the Church of
Greece to appeal to all concerned: “[W]ith enlightenment by Our Lord
Jesus that it is possible to find a mutually accepted solution.”
But the creditors’ hearts are
enlightened only by money, not by the Lord Jesus. Creditors not only
want flesh; blood, heart and the whole body and soul are their demand.
Panos Skourletis, the Greek minister for labor, said: Every time we are
about to reach a solution they come and say bring some more pensioners
to execute.
The Greek prime minister, in his address, identified the creditors’ proposal:
The Greek prime minister, in his address, identified the creditors’ proposal:
“These proposals clearly violate
European social rules and fundamental rights to work, equality and to
dignity, proving that the aim of some partners and institutions was not a
viable and beneficial agreement for all sides, but the humiliation of
the entire Greek people.
“These proposals prove the fixation, primarily of the International Monetary Fund, to tough and punitive austerity.”
So, the all-powerful IMF is there with its cruelty, with its indifference to life and dignity of people.
But Tsipras’ position is the opposite of the IMF as he addressed the people:
“My fellow Greeks, we are now
burdened with the historic responsibility, (in homage to) to the
struggles of the Hellenic people, to enshrine democracy and our national
sovereignty.
“It is a responsibility to the
future of our country. And that responsibility compels us to answer to
this ultimatum based on the will of the Greek people.”
After concluding the
inconclusive negotiation with the Euro bosses the Greek prime minister
returned home, convened meeting of the Greek cabinet, and suggested the
“referendum for the Greek people to decide in sovereignty.” The
suggestion was unanimously accepted by the cabinet. Within a short time,
he addressed the nation. The cabinet decided to ratify the July 5
referendum proposal in the plenary of the Greek parliament.
The referendum will pose the
question of the acceptance or rejection of the proposal by the
institutions. Even, before addressing the people, Tsipras communicated
the Greek cabinet’s decision to the French president, the German
chancellor and the ECB president. The Greek prime minister informed:
“[T]omorrow in correspondence to the EU leaders and institutions I will
formally request a few days extension of the (bailout) program so the
Greek people can decide, free of pressure or coercion, as is dictated by
the Constitution of our country and the democratic tradition of
Europe.”
So, the move is clean,
transparent and fair. There’s no ambiguity, no backdoor deal, no attempt
to keep people in dark. Tsipras’ address to the nation emphasizes a
number of issues relevant not only to Greece, but also to other
countries facing the world masters, bank bosses. He said:
“My fellow Greeks,
“To this autocratic and harsh austerity, we should respond with democracy, with composure and decisiveness.
“Greece, the cradle of democracy, should send a strong democratic answer to Europe and the world community.
“I am absolutely certain your choice will honor the history of our country, and send a message of dignity to the whole world.”
It’s the message of democracy
and dignity, which is sold out by leadership, lackey in character, in
countries although democracy and dignity are the “tools” to fight
command, dictation, and authoritarian rule of the world bosses.
Emphasis on people, sovereignty and dignity is clearly spelled out as Tsipras addressed the Greek people:
“I call upon you all to take the decisions worthy of us.
“For us, future generations, for the history of Greeks.
“For the sovereignty and dignity of our people.”
In the struggle for building up a
prosperous life, for asserting rights over public properties and
defending those, dignity and democracy are the cornerstones. For
building up a prosperous life for the people, claiming public properties
are essential as essential is asserting the rights with the sense of
dignity. In today’s world, two trends are visible: undignified acts by a
group of political leadership in a group of countries, and strivings
for a dignified life by another group. Today’s Greece teaches dignity.
It shames those political leaders without any sense of shame. Sense of
dignity tells not to capitulate. It tells not to surrender people’s
sovereign space. It’s one of the essential elements in the struggle
against usurpers of public resources. Greece is showing this still.
In the case of Greece, Tsipras’, Varoufakis’ and their comrades’ stand is significant in two ways:
(1) In this Greece, bankers
dictated and successfully made a regime change. In this Greece, bankers
imposed whatever they liked. And, in this Greece, Tsipras, Varoufakis,
the Spartan finance minister, and their comrades are standing on
people’s mandate; they are bargaining on the strength of people’s
mandate; they are going back to people to review their mandate through
the proposed referendum. Bankers have not succeeded in toppling Tsipras
and his comrades still.
(2) In the countries with austerity-bitten people, the struggle Greece is waging today will have implications. One of the implications will be political. Another will be in mass-psyche. The rest implications include lesson for a part of political leadership in those countries.
(2) In the countries with austerity-bitten people, the struggle Greece is waging today will have implications. One of the implications will be political. Another will be in mass-psyche. The rest implications include lesson for a part of political leadership in those countries.
Bankers will also learn from a
political leadership’s practice with democracy and dignity. Their first
attempt will be to subvert similar leadership and politics in the
austerity-battered countries.
Greece, it’s hoped, will be
studied by political scientists as incidents in and related to the
country are connected to a number of aspects of bourgeois democracy,
state and people. A few limits, connections, roles are starkly visible.
The incidents are not limited within its borders. This perspective
generates serious questions.
The compromise question needs
emphasis. Possibilities of compromises are always there. Compromises
vary on the basis of principled stand, and its opposite. Limitations of
circumstance compel, at times, to compromise. Sweeping comments
regarding compromise, as adventurism resorts to, leads to a wrong place:
isolation from friends, all sorts of inactivity but slogan-mongering,
misleading people, and handing over opportunity to foe. In today’s
Greece, both examples are present.
Moves by Tsipras, Varoufakis and
their comrades are an example of political fight. The people are also
participating in the fight. It’s an example of political fight against
bankers. It’s meaningful. It’s meaningful as it’s Greece. Its past,
history, present, its types of relation with bankers over times, its
geopolitical position, size of the economy, Greece, and power of the
parties on the other side of negotiation table make the ongoing Greek
incidents meaningful.
The developments show it’s not
possible by masters to intervene all the time or any time, and it’s not
always possible to confuse people. Still the Greek people have not sent
their trust to masters’ vault. It’s a lesson for people of other
countries.
In an interview to the German
radio station Deutschlandfunk the European commissioner for energy
Gunther Oettinger warned: Greece may be forced out of the Eurozone,
unless the Greek government and its creditors can reach an agreement by
the end of the month.
But, from his end, the Greek prime minister clearly conveyed his message on the Euro position:
“In these crucial hours, we must all remember Europe is the common home of its people. There are no owners or guests in Europe.
“Greece is, and will remain an
indispensable part of Europe and Europe an indispensable part of Greece.
But Greece without democracy is a Europe without identity or a
compass.”
Euro bosses will not lend their
ears to this assertion: “Greece without democracy is a Europe without
identity or a compass”. But the people of Europe should stand to defend
democracy in Greece as it will be a part of defending democracy in home.
And, brutal austerity-dictation by authoritarian bank bosses can be
fought out with democracy only.
With the message, Tsipras is
standing for Europe, a democratic Europe, the Europe bankers fear as
democratic practice always stands as a bulwark against authoritarian
rule. Bankers’ choice is a docile, fragmented Europe, a Europe to be
ruled only by bankers. Tsipras has signaled: Leaving Europe is not the
choice of Greece. The crisis that bankers have created is, as Tsipras
said, “threatening the future of European unification.”
More interesting incidents are
going to happen in Europe, and in Greece, the economy 2 percent of the
eurozone and smaller than a number of cosmopolitan cities in the world
metropolis. There’s a deadline now: June 30, payment of euro 1.6 billion
to IMF.
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