Thousands March Against Austerity in Frankfurt
Sunday, 20 May 2012 09:14By Melissa Eddy, The New York Times News Service | Report
The peaceful event, called Blockupy, in a nod to the Occupy movement, was the culmination of four days of demonstrations and drew about 20,000 protesters to Frankfurt, the police and organizers said.
The protest, which drew supporters from across Europe, was meant to send a “clear and visible signal of international solidarity against the authoritarian crisis management and the poverty inducing policies of the European Union, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund,” organizers said.
Germany has pushed for deep spending cuts across Europe to control the
.
Ms. Merkel faces mounting criticism for championing what critics regard as a rigid agenda of fiscal discipline that has made unfair demands on countries like Greece, Portugal and Spain.
Speaking from the
meeting in the United States on Saturday, Ms. Merkel sought to play down criticism that she was solely focused on austerity, or consolidation, saying Germany would be open to increasing loans and credits to struggling nations through the European Investment Bank.
“The important message is this: Consolidation and growth are the two sides of the same medallion,” Ms. Merkel said, according to the German broadcaster ARD.
This article, "Thousands March Against Austerity in Frankfurt," originally appears at the New York Times News Service.
No comments:
Post a Comment