Emergency Greek Bill allows 15,500 public sector layoffs

Move to permit massive redundancy plan by end of 2014 a condition for €8.8bn in rescue loans

Protesters burn an effigy depicting the fate of  Greek workers at a rally in Athens yesterday  against the government’s plan to fire thousands of public sector workers as part of its austerity reform programme. Photograph: John Kolesidis/Reuters
Protesters burn an effigy depicting the fate of Greek workers at a rally in Athens yesterday against the government’s plan to fire thousands of public sector workers as part of its austerity reform programme. Photograph: John Kolesidis/Reuters

Greece’s parliament has approved an emergency Bill to pave the way for thousands of public sector layoffs and clear the way for €8.8 billion in international rescue loans.

The Bill, which passed in a 168-123 vote, will allow for the first civil service layoffs in more than a century.

About 2,000 civil servants will be laid off by the end of May, with another 2,000 following by the end of the year and a further 11,500 by the end of 2014, for a total of 15,500.

The legislation is the latest wave of Greece's draconian austerity programme. It agreed this month with its bailout rescue lenders - the European Union and International Monetary Fund - to implement the measures as a condition to receive new emergency loans worth €8.8 billion.

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The permanence of civil servant jobs has been enshrined in all constitutions since 1911, a form of protection from wholesale sacking when the government changes hands.

Disciplinary councils

To get around the constitutional protection, the Bill stipulates the first layoffs will take place in state agencies that will be disbanded or merged. A provision also aims to bypass, if needed, the notoriously slow and lenient disciplinary councils, which have refused to lay off even people convicted of felonies. More than 2,000 such cases are pending, nearly 600 on appeal.

The civil servants’ union, ADEDY, bitterly opposed the Bill’s provisions and called for a protest outside parliament. Authorities took strict security measures, such as barricading a parliament entrance since yesterday morning and diverting traffic and shutting down a subway station two hours before the announced start of the protest. In the end, fewer than 300 people showed up.

The Bill contained many unrelated provisions, from the payment of back taxes and social security contributions to the end of bakeries’ monopoly in baking bread.

To shorten debate and to present the Bill as a sort of confidence vote, the government bundled 110 pages of legislation into a single article. Debate in committee lasted a single day and so did debate in the full parliament, despite opposition protests and claims of a “parliamentary coup”.

AP