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Greek police fire tear gas as 7,000 protest vaccine rules

Protesters say they are not against vaccines, but against 'fascism'.

AFP
2 minute read
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Anti-vaccine protesters run to avoid tear gas during clashes at central Syntagma square, in Athens, Greece, Aug 29. Police used tear gas to disperse thousands of protesters opposing the government's plans for mandatory vaccination and new testing requirements and attendance restrictions on people who aren't vaccinated against Covid-19. Photo: AP
Anti-vaccine protesters run to avoid tear gas during clashes at central Syntagma square, in Athens, Greece, Aug 29. Police used tear gas to disperse thousands of protesters opposing the government's plans for mandatory vaccination and new testing requirements and attendance restrictions on people who aren't vaccinated against Covid-19. Photo: AP

Around 7,000 people protested in Athens on Sunday against a new rule obliging health workers to get vaccinated against Covid-19, said police who fired tear gas to quell violence among the demonstrators.

The rule change, which came into effect on Wednesday requires that all personnel working in hospitals be vaccinated.

The demonstrators waved Greek flags and brandished placards declaring: “We are not against vaccines, but against fascism” and “Long live democracy”.

“It’s amazing that I’m put on sick leave because I refuse to be vaccinated when for months I have helped to contain the epidemic, I have worked in very difficult conditions,” said Christos Bakakios, an ambulance driver who joined the protest.

A nurse, who gave her name as Lina, said: “The Greek health system will collapse if they put all the caregivers who refuse to be vaccinated on furlough.”

“The hospitals are already overcrowded. That would make no sense,” she added.

Sporadic violence broke out in the evening. One group of demonstrators threw stones and bottles at the police who responded with tear gas, according to an AFP videographer on the spot.

Greece’s government on Tuesday announced an array of new restrictions and the end, next month, of free testing for those who remain unjabbed against Covid-19 in an effort to boost vaccination rates.

The government took the measures in part to encourage people to get vaccinated, as the contagious Delta variant of Covid-19 takes hold.

At the moment 99% of seriously ill coronavirus patients, those intubated in hospital, have not been vaccinated.

Retirement home workers have been obliged to get vaccinated since mid-August.

Ten employees at a home in Volos, in the centre of the country, were recently suspended from work.

More than 5.7 million of Greece’s 10.7 million inhabitants have been fully vaccinated against coronavirus.

But the spread of the Delta variant continues to cause concern.

On Sunday Greece registered around 1,500 new Covid cases.

Over 13,600 people have died of the disease in the country since the pandemic began.