Portuguese strike in protest at austerity measures
LISBON (Reuters) - Portuguese workers halted trains, shut ports and paralysed most public transport in the capital Lisbon on Thursday in protest at austerity measures and labour reforms imposed as a condition of a 78-billion-euro ($103 billion) bailout.
"Occupy the streets, block everything" is one of the slogans adopted by the workers, who say the reforms turn the clock back on employment rights, ramp up joblessness and erode living standards.
Portugal's largest union, the CGTP, aims to bring the country to a standstill, but the Portuguese have so far shown little interest in imitating the kind of protests seen in Greece. One trade union, the UGT, the country's second-largest, has signed up to the reforms, and private sector workers have been reluctant to commit to the strike.
Portugal, facing its worst recession since the 1970s, was forced to take a bailout from the European Union and International Monetary Fund in May last year after running up large debts. Some economists say it might need a second bailout as the recession deepens, putting its budget targets in doubt and jeopardising its planned return to the bond markets late next year.
Strike organisers said the country's railway transport was paralysed, including the international Lisbon-Madrid route. Lisbon's underground was shut at midnight. Many hospitals were only accepting emergencies.
The centre-right government is betting that relative public apathy will help it impose painful spending cuts and policy reforms to drag the country out of its debt crisis.
The UGT, which is allied to the opposition Socialist Party, has urged opponents of austerity to show restraint, warning that Portugal could descend into the kind of chaos seen in Greece.
But the CGTP's new Communist leader, Armenio Carlos, is eager to fight the measures.
The strikers say the new labour laws, which make it easier to hire and fire staff and which cut compensation for workers, mark the biggest step backwards for workers since Portugal's return to democracy in 1974 after military rule.
The strike "will be a sort of a test for the new union leadership", said Jose Adelino Maltez, a political scientist at Lisbon Technical University.
"They will try to show that they can go beyond the usual stoppages in the public service and transport, that the movement is broader than its Communist supporters."
With public transport shut down or running skeleton services, the main impact of the strike could be in stopping people getting to work.
"I don't expect the country to stop, but we can expect a strong showing, maybe with some export-oriented companies halting output, to give a signal that there is a strong unionised force in Portugal to be reckoned with," said Maltez.
COSTLY KISS
Posters urging workers to join the strike have been put up around Lisbon, and big protest marches are planned for Thursday afternoon.
"This kiss leaves us penniless," read one mural in the port area, showing Prime Minister Pedro Passos Coelho kissing German Chancellor Angela Merkel's backside, and urging workers to strike.
This year's harsh economic downturn has pushed unemployment above 14 percent, and the government expects the economy to contract by 3.3 percent.
Portugal's core deficit tripled in the first two months of 2012, showing that the slump is denting tax revenues and stoking concerns that the country could miss its budgetary targets.
But the centre-right government still commands strong support, despite promising tough times ahead when it came to power last year, suggesting many Portuguese believe that the austerity measures will eventually lead to recovery.
(Additional Reporting By Andrei Khalip; Editing by Giles Elgood)