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"Before we can talk about further aid, Greece has to make sure that all austerity and reform measures are duly implemented," said Michael Meister, a deputy caucus leader of German Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservative party. "I would like to have a signal that this is finally happening," the lawmaker told Wednesday's German Rheinische Post daily. EU and IMF officials are currently in Athens for talks on the austerity program
-- on which the continued release of the bailout loans depends. Greek unions say the protracted austerity, amid a two-year recession and unemployment at around 15 percent, is unfairly targeting the less well-off. A statement from the country's largest union, the GSEE, said Wednesday's strike expresses "strong protest at the unjust and cruel policies that have caused a surge in unemployment ... violated labor rights, and squandered public wealth, while failing to insure an exit from recession." In Athens' port of Piraeus, Greece's biggest, striking ferry electrician Athanassios Sidiropoulos said the government was trying to scrap rights won over the course of decades by working classes. "All seamen should have pension and healthcare rights, collective labor contracts, health care contributions," he said. An opinion poll commissioned by the private Mega TV station and published Tuesday said 71 percent of the public oppose the government's handling of the economic crisis, compared with 66 percent in February. The Socialists' 18-month-old government held a slender lead over the main opposition conservatives. Details on the number of people questioned in the poll and its margin of error were not provided.
[Associated
Press;
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