Acropolis sell-off in Greek archaeologists protest

Greek civil servants protesting mass staff cuts took their campaign to the gates of the ancient Acropolis on Friday, after the government announced that 500 workers at the culture ministry would be suspended next month.

Acropolis sell-off in Greek archaeologists protest
State archaeologists gathered in front of the Acropolis to protest massive public
sector lay-offs announced by the Greek government [Credit: TANN]
State archaeologists gathered in front of the ancient site, but did not block the entrance. Several museums around the country, including the popular Archaeological Museum on the island of Santorini, were closed in protest.

Elsewhere, civil servants continued a second day of work stoppages and held a protest rally in central Athens.

The government has promised its international rescue lenders it will suspend 25 000 public sector workers by the end of the year, with about a third of them likely to be fired.

Despina Koutsoumba, head of the Association of Greek Archaeologists at the ministry, said employees were preparing to step up protests, and were to hold a meeting on Monday to decide on strikes.

"As things stand, we don't have enough people to function properly. We have to cover 19 000 archaeological sites and 210 museums nationwide, as well as several hundred archaeological excavations in progress all over the country," Koutsoumba told the AP, as colleagues held up a Styrofoam cut of a temple, with "for sale" signs stuck on it.

Growing pressure

"We have 6 600 staff at the Ministry of Culture and Sport, and they will dismiss 500. But they will just have to hire that number back again — of course on part-time contracts and for less money."