Sunday Family Humour 19th December Newsweek

Sunday Family Humour 19th December Newsweek

Jokes presentations, videos, pictures, cartoons - family humour

Pre Christmas issue

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Public transportation, which came to a standstill in Athens on Tuesday because of a strike by mass transit employees, was expected to run a limited service Wednesday in order to ferry people to and from the protests, ANA reported.

There were no flights all day Wednesday at Athens International Airport, authorities there announced.

Wednesday's strike was also expected to affect state hospitals and health services, airlines, coastal shipping, courts, banks, as well as national and suburban trains, ANA reported. Taxi drivers also called a four-hour work stoppage in the middle of the day.

There will also be a news blackout Wednesday because of a 24-hour strike called by journalists' unions, ANA said. The unions have also called a 48-hour strike for Friday and Saturday.

The ADEDY union says its main demand is for the government to recall the "socially unjust government-imposed measures leading workers and pensioners to poverty and misery."

The financial measures were enacted by the "IMF-EU-ECB troika, the government, and the financially strong," the union said, referring also to the European Central Bank.

"Employees must put an end to the blackmail conditions imposed by speculators," the union said in a statement. "It is 'those in the know' and the rich that must pay for the crisis."

Parliament adopted a law Tuesday diminishing the power of collective labor agreements, making it easier for employers to fire people. It also says hundreds of thousands of employees in the civil sector will be getting a pay cut of 10%.

The new round of austerity measures focuses on structural reforms, particularly in the public sector, which employs more than 20% of the Greek labor force.

Demonstrations are set to continue throughout the week.

The 2011 budget, scheduled to be voted on in parliament on December 22, foresees the deficit declining from 9.4% of GDP to 7.4%. Many of the cuts are focused on the public sector, including public enterprises such as the railways and other forms of public transportation.

Members of the militant left-wing PAME union were also on strike Wednesday. In a statement, they vowed "no sacrifice for the plutocracy" and said the problems facing the Greek economy were not created by the people, but by "greedy capitalists."

"We strike because the EU, the International Monetary Fund, the government lead us to poverty, unemployment; they continuously load us with new burdens," PAME said. "They abolish the collective agreements; they further reduce our salaries and day-wages."

WikiLeaks hackers threaten British Government --An army of computer hackers is planning to bring down British government websites if Julian Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks, is extradited to Sweden. 10 Dec 2010 The 1,500-strong network of online activists has already sabotaged the websites of MasterCard, Visa and the Swedish government with millions of bogus visits. The attacks, termed “Operation Payback”, came after the credit card companies and PayPal, an online payment firm, announced that they would no longer process donations to the anti-secrecy organisation.

There are now so may Wikileaks mirrors, one is likely to appear in your bathroom any time now,

See you next week

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