Thousands in Lisbon protest against austerity cuts

LISBON  (Reuters) – Tens of thousands marched in Lisbon yesterday against the government’s austerity measures, with the leader of Portugal’s top union vowing to intensify resistance but stopping short of calling a strike.

The rally was the first outpouring of popular discontent after the government announced additional austerity measures such as tax hikes, pay and spending cuts on May 13.

But the peaceful rally was a far cry from the tense, at times violent, atmosphere at protests in other austerity-afflicted European Union states, especially Greece.

The 725,000-strong Confederation of Portuguese Workers (CGTP) had said it expected as many as 200,000 to march. A CGTP national committee official said tens of thousands of people joined the march. Police declined to estimate the turnout.
The rally did not appear as big as other demonstrations held in the same central Lisbon location, the largest of which was one by 140,000 teachers in 2008.

CGTP leader Manuel Carvalho da Silva said, however, that the union plans to escalate protests against the financial cutbacks. His union has left open the option of calling a general strike.

“We are going to intensify, diversify the labour and social struggle,” he told the protesters after they had marched down Liberdade avenue — Lisbon’s main thoroughfare.

“We are committed to all the forms of resistance the constitution allows, and will decide on their timing and form depending on the government’s actions,” Carvalho da Silva said.

He called the government’s measures “false solutions, not inevitable and profoundly wrong political options”.
The government’s plan aims to soothe investor concerns over Portugal’s creditworthiness and fight debt contagion from Greece. Portugal seeks to cut its budget deficit to 7.3 per cent of gross domestic product this year from 2009’s high of 9.4 per cent, and then gradually to 2.8 per cent by 2013.