Workers at Greece’s dominant power utility Public Power Corporation
(PPC) took to the streets on Wednesday urging lawmakers to rescind the
planned sale of power stations which they have branded a "national
crime."
Hundreds of workers gathered outside parliament, as lawmakers debated
legislation which paves the way for PPC to begin selling plants in
May.
"Privatizing PPC means fewer jobs, lower wages,” said Spyros
Nikolopoulos, 54, a PPC worker for 32 years. "PPC belongs to the Greek
people, it cannot be sold to any private investor.”
Some of the protesters emptied sacks of coal outside parliament.
Greece is implementing reforms and asset sales in exchange for loans from the European Union.
It has agreed with its lenders to sell 40 percent of the coal-fired capacity of the PPC, which is majority state controlled.
A coal-fired unit and a license for a second in Florina, northern
Greece, will be sold along with two units in southern Greece. Under
bailout terms, PPC should launch an international tender for a buyer at
the end of May.
Workers fear the sale will lead to job losses and hurt their labor rights, despite PPC assurances that jobs will be protected.
The country is to divest the capacity to comply with a European court
ruling which said that PPC had abused its dominant position in the dirty
but cheap coal market.
EU competition regulators which put out feelers for interest in the
asset in a so-called ‘market test’ got interest from fifteen investors,
PPC said.
Wednesday’s protest was organized by PPC’s most powerful union GENOP-DEH, which kicked off rolling strikes this week.
Lawmakers were expected to vote on the bill later Wednesday.
Asset sales is a sensitive issue within the ruling leftist Syriza
party, which was catapulted to power in 2015 promising to reverse
privatizations.
The conservative opposition accused the government of bringing PPC "to the brink of disaster” and lying to its voters.
"We feel betrayed,” said Nicos Siakotos, a 46-year old father of two
who has been working at one of PPC’s plants in the Peloponnese since
1992 and now slated for sale.
"I’m afraid of losing my job like the other 1,100 workers in my town.”
(www.ekathimerini.com/Reuters)