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Anti-Austerity Cops Face Off Against Riot Police in Portugal

Above: Portuguese police officers gather outside parliament during a protest in Lisbon on November 21, 2013.

Whose Side Are You On?  Continued cuts to public sector pensions put security unions on the protest side of the barricades

Defending their pensions from the threat of ever-deepening austerity cuts, as many as ten thousand off-duty police officers and state security agents in Portugal found themselves on the other side of the barricades Thursday night as they faced down their on-duty colleagues in riot control gear.

An on-duty police officer stand guard outside the Portuguese parliament during a demonstration by national security forces unions in Lisbon on Thursday. (AP)
An on-duty police officer stand guard outside the Portuguese parliament during a demonstration by national security forces unions in Lisbon on Thursday. (AP)

With a march through Lisbon that ended at the steps of parliament, the angry police and security union members broke through security fences, and even briefly occupied the entrance to Parliament before the night was over.

The proposed cuts in public pensions are being demanded by the nation’s creditors in exchange for a government bailout package received in 2011.

A demonstrator waves the flag of the Association of Professional Police Officers during a protest against the government's austerity measures outside Parliament in Lisbon. (Photo: AFP/Francisco Leong)
A demonstrator waves the flag of the Association of Professional Police Officers during a protest against the government’s austerity measures outside Parliament in Lisbon. (Photo: AFP/Francisco Leong)

As Agence France-Presse reports:

Thousands of Portuguese police officers, paramilitary police and other security officers took to the streets of the capital to protest the government’s latest austerity measures.

Police in plain clothes massed outside parliament, where they broke through a security cordon to briefly occupy the steps leading up to the building.

An off-duty office is detained on the steps of parliament. (AP)
An off-duty office is detained on the steps of parliament. (AP)

During an earlier march, they had called for the government to resign, carrying a banner that read “For professional dignity and people’s security.”

Unions said the rally was the biggest ever organised by the country’s police, and warned that budget cuts planned for next year would “destabilise the work of the police” and “deteriorate public security.”

Media reports estimated the number of demonstrators at between 8,000 and 10,000.

“I’ve been with the police for eight years and never got promoted or a pay rise, even though I have a family now and more responsibilities,” complained protester Manuel Ribas, 32.

“Next year, they will take another 100 euros [$135] out of my gross salary, which will leave me with 900 euros a month, just as if I had just left the police academy.”

Following the raucous protest, the police superintendent of the nation’s police Paulo Gomes tendered his resignation

People march towards the Portuguese parliament during a protest in Lisbon on November 21, 2013. (Press TV)
People march towards the Portuguese parliament during a protest in Lisbon on November 21, 2013. (Press TV)

 

 

 

 

 

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